24/03/2005

IVF patients could choose baby’s sex

A Science & Technology Committee report suggests parents undergoing IVF treatment may be able to choose the sex of their baby.

MP’s have called for the Human Fertilisation & Embryology Authority (HFEA) to be disbanded claiming it was “taboo” research.

Fertility expert, Lord Robert Winston told BBC Radio 4 he also opposed the report and said people would not go through IVF to choose the sex of their baby, and the numbers who would want to do so were very small.

However, Chair of the HFEA, Suzi Leather, said it makes a number of bold and challenging recommendations, particularly around the freedom that doctors and scientists should have in the future to push back the boundaries of current practice.

“The big question for the fertility and research sectors in the future is how we will maintain patient safety, public confidence and minimise risks from developing technologies,” said Ms Leather. “The acid test for this report will be how well it deals with to the public’s concerns and meets the need to take these important areas of public interest forward.”

The British Fertility Society (BFS) welcomed the steps towards openness in fertility treatment but have concerns about the effects of the removal of anonymity on donor fertility services.

Alison Murdoch, Chair of the BFS, said: “15 years ago IVF was a novel treatment and not generally accepted. In 2005, nearly 2 per cent of all babies born in the UK are conceived with the help of assisted reproductive technologies. It is appropriate, therefore, that regulation is more consistent with that applied to other clinical treatments.”

(CD/SP)

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