Roberta
06-25-2003, 01:55 PM
The problem with 'embryo adoption'
COMMENTARY By Arthur Caplan, MSNBC contributor
One of the strangest outcomes of the ongoing debate over embryonic stem-cell
research is the government's use of taxpayer money to support a little-known
private organization called Snowflakes. Devoted to encouraging couples to
"adopt" human embryos, Snowflakes has received over $1 million from the Bush
administration and Congress.
WHILE HELPING people have babies is ethically commendable, there is something
very strange about extending the use of the term "adoption" to embryos.
Children get adopted, but ... embryos?
And, it is even stranger that the federal government is buying into this way of
thinking.
So where do all these embryos that supposedly need adopting come from in the
first place?
When couples seek treatment for infertility, they often wind up using in-vitro
fertilization, or IVF. This is a procedure in which embryos are created outside
the body in a laboratory dish and are then implanted back into the woman's body
where, ideally, they grow to full term.
It works like this: The woman takes fertility drugs that cause her to produce
far more eggs than the one she normally would release during her monthly cycle.
These eggs are then surgically removed from her ovaries and fertilized in a
dish with either her husband's or a donor's sperm.
Often many embryos are created through this process. But since
multiple-pregnancies -- quadruplets, quintuplets, septuplets and the like --
produce premature and often unhealthy babies, doctors will only put two or
three embryos back into the woman's body to try and help her become pregnant.
The clinic chooses to implant the embryos that look the healthiest and asks the
couple if they want to freeze the rest. The couple also has the option of
having the remaining embryos destroyed, donated to other couples, or donated
for embryonic stem-cell research.
'PRE-BORN CHILDREN WAITING'
This is where Snowflakes saw a need -- and a chance to score some moral points
in the debate over stem-cell research.
Snowflakes is run by the Nightlight Christian Adoption agency in Fullerton,
Calif. The group has no medical background. They simply believe that every
embryo is a baby from the minute it exists in a laboratory dish.
The Snowflakes program deliberately uses the language of adoption to make that
point clear. They created a service that matches couples who have leftover
embryos with other infertile couples trying to have babies. To quote from
their"By some estimates, there are over 100,000 frozen embryos in cryo-banks
throughout the United States. Pre-born children waiting -- waiting."
Actually Snowflakes' estimate of 100,000 embryos is probably very low. Most
experts think there are as many as 400,000 embryos frozen in storage in the
United States. As of just over a year ago, the Snowflakes program had received
about 750 of them and had matched 70 donor couples with 48 other couples
seeking to have children. Sixteen babies had been born.
WHAT'S THE BIG DEAL?
So what's the big deal about a religious group that believes all embryos are
children and is trying to find them "adoptive" parents among infertile couples
using IVF? Well, actually there is a lot that is wrong.
It's great that 16 babies were born last year through the Snowflakes program.
That makes it seem as if 16 couples had children who might otherwise have not.
But that is not really the case. Nearly all infertility clinics offer couples
the option of donating their leftover embryos to other couples. All that
Snowflakes has done is brought the rhetoric of adoption into the process.
You might also get the impression that Snowflakes is creating an opportunity
for infertile couples to access the 100,000 to 400,000 frozen embryos out
there. But that is not really the case either. If you are infertile and are
trying to have a baby, your best bet is not to use a frozen embryo made by a
couple who had themselves been going through infertility treatment and whose
embryos were not used because they did not look healthy enough.
Despite Snowflakes' rhetoric, most frozen embryos are not healthy enough to
ever become babies. The chance they will grow to full term is about one in 10
for those frozen less than five years, and even less for those that have been
frozen longer. This is why so few couples have taken Snowflakes up on its idea
of "adopting" frozen embryos.
Moreover, using terms like "adoption" encourages people to believe that frozen
embryos are the equivalent of children. But they are not the same. In fact,
infertile couples who want children can frequently make embryos but they cannot
make embryos that become fetuses or babies.
The older a woman gets, the less likely her embryos are to become babies. For
women over 45, the chance of her embryo becoming a baby is almost zero. The
inability to make embryos that become babies is why couples turn to donor eggs
or donor sperm. Almost no one who is going to spend $10,000 per try to use IVF
is going to want to try it with another infertile couple's frozen embryo whose
chances of properly developing grow less with every year it is frozen.
A GOVERNMENT SHAM
The Bush administration and Congress know all these facts, but have
nevertheless poured more than $1 million of taxpayer money into the Snowflakes
program and others aimed at facilitating "embryo adoption."
This is a nice way to score points with those who advocate the view that
embryos are actual babies and should not be used for research purposes. But it
is not the best way to help couples who want to have actual babies.
One million dollars would be far better spent matching fertile couples willing
to make embryos with infertile couples, rather than trying to get them to use
unhealthy frozen ones.
One million dollars could also help defray the staggering costs of IVF, which
only middle- and upper-class couples can currently afford.
But when the money is spent on programs like Snowflakes, the only explanation
is ideology not medicine.
Arthur Caplan, Ph.D., is director of the Center for Bioethics at the University
of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
Roberta
mom to Juliette, 7, adopted from China
COMMENTARY By Arthur Caplan, MSNBC contributor
One of the strangest outcomes of the ongoing debate over embryonic stem-cell
research is the government's use of taxpayer money to support a little-known
private organization called Snowflakes. Devoted to encouraging couples to
"adopt" human embryos, Snowflakes has received over $1 million from the Bush
administration and Congress.
WHILE HELPING people have babies is ethically commendable, there is something
very strange about extending the use of the term "adoption" to embryos.
Children get adopted, but ... embryos?
And, it is even stranger that the federal government is buying into this way of
thinking.
So where do all these embryos that supposedly need adopting come from in the
first place?
When couples seek treatment for infertility, they often wind up using in-vitro
fertilization, or IVF. This is a procedure in which embryos are created outside
the body in a laboratory dish and are then implanted back into the woman's body
where, ideally, they grow to full term.
It works like this: The woman takes fertility drugs that cause her to produce
far more eggs than the one she normally would release during her monthly cycle.
These eggs are then surgically removed from her ovaries and fertilized in a
dish with either her husband's or a donor's sperm.
Often many embryos are created through this process. But since
multiple-pregnancies -- quadruplets, quintuplets, septuplets and the like --
produce premature and often unhealthy babies, doctors will only put two or
three embryos back into the woman's body to try and help her become pregnant.
The clinic chooses to implant the embryos that look the healthiest and asks the
couple if they want to freeze the rest. The couple also has the option of
having the remaining embryos destroyed, donated to other couples, or donated
for embryonic stem-cell research.
'PRE-BORN CHILDREN WAITING'
This is where Snowflakes saw a need -- and a chance to score some moral points
in the debate over stem-cell research.
Snowflakes is run by the Nightlight Christian Adoption agency in Fullerton,
Calif. The group has no medical background. They simply believe that every
embryo is a baby from the minute it exists in a laboratory dish.
The Snowflakes program deliberately uses the language of adoption to make that
point clear. They created a service that matches couples who have leftover
embryos with other infertile couples trying to have babies. To quote from
their"By some estimates, there are over 100,000 frozen embryos in cryo-banks
throughout the United States. Pre-born children waiting -- waiting."
Actually Snowflakes' estimate of 100,000 embryos is probably very low. Most
experts think there are as many as 400,000 embryos frozen in storage in the
United States. As of just over a year ago, the Snowflakes program had received
about 750 of them and had matched 70 donor couples with 48 other couples
seeking to have children. Sixteen babies had been born.
WHAT'S THE BIG DEAL?
So what's the big deal about a religious group that believes all embryos are
children and is trying to find them "adoptive" parents among infertile couples
using IVF? Well, actually there is a lot that is wrong.
It's great that 16 babies were born last year through the Snowflakes program.
That makes it seem as if 16 couples had children who might otherwise have not.
But that is not really the case. Nearly all infertility clinics offer couples
the option of donating their leftover embryos to other couples. All that
Snowflakes has done is brought the rhetoric of adoption into the process.
You might also get the impression that Snowflakes is creating an opportunity
for infertile couples to access the 100,000 to 400,000 frozen embryos out
there. But that is not really the case either. If you are infertile and are
trying to have a baby, your best bet is not to use a frozen embryo made by a
couple who had themselves been going through infertility treatment and whose
embryos were not used because they did not look healthy enough.
Despite Snowflakes' rhetoric, most frozen embryos are not healthy enough to
ever become babies. The chance they will grow to full term is about one in 10
for those frozen less than five years, and even less for those that have been
frozen longer. This is why so few couples have taken Snowflakes up on its idea
of "adopting" frozen embryos.
Moreover, using terms like "adoption" encourages people to believe that frozen
embryos are the equivalent of children. But they are not the same. In fact,
infertile couples who want children can frequently make embryos but they cannot
make embryos that become fetuses or babies.
The older a woman gets, the less likely her embryos are to become babies. For
women over 45, the chance of her embryo becoming a baby is almost zero. The
inability to make embryos that become babies is why couples turn to donor eggs
or donor sperm. Almost no one who is going to spend $10,000 per try to use IVF
is going to want to try it with another infertile couple's frozen embryo whose
chances of properly developing grow less with every year it is frozen.
A GOVERNMENT SHAM
The Bush administration and Congress know all these facts, but have
nevertheless poured more than $1 million of taxpayer money into the Snowflakes
program and others aimed at facilitating "embryo adoption."
This is a nice way to score points with those who advocate the view that
embryos are actual babies and should not be used for research purposes. But it
is not the best way to help couples who want to have actual babies.
One million dollars would be far better spent matching fertile couples willing
to make embryos with infertile couples, rather than trying to get them to use
unhealthy frozen ones.
One million dollars could also help defray the staggering costs of IVF, which
only middle- and upper-class couples can currently afford.
But when the money is spent on programs like Snowflakes, the only explanation
is ideology not medicine.
Arthur Caplan, Ph.D., is director of the Center for Bioethics at the University
of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
Roberta
mom to Juliette, 7, adopted from China
