Ova Time: Women Line Up To Donate Eggs -- for Money

http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB122878524586490129-lMyQjAxMDI4MjA4OTcwODk1Wj.html
 



By MELINDA BECK

Here's another sign of the tough economic times: Some clinics are 
reporting a surge in the number of women applying to donate eggs or 
serve as surrogate mothers for infertile couples.

The going rate for a surrogate is about $25,000. Egg donors generally 
receive $3,000 to $8,000. But a few agencies advertise that they'll 
pay much more for specific characteristics. One ad running in campus 
newspapers promises $25,000 for a donor who is "100% Jewish with ... 
High SAT Scores... Attractive, at Healthy Body Weight and Free of 
Genetic Diseases."

View Full Image
A human egg.

Photo Researchers

A human egg.
A human egg.

A human egg.


"Whenever the employment rate is down, we get more calls," says Robin 
von Halle, president of Alternative Reproductive Resources, an agency 
in Chicago where inquiries from would-be egg donors are up 30% in 
recent weeks -- to about 60 calls a day. "We're even getting men 
offering up their wives. It's pretty scary."

James Liu, a reproductive endocrinologist at University Hospitals, 
Case Medical Center, in Cleveland, says there is no waiting now for 
egg donors since his roster has swelled from the usual 4 to 17.

Andrew Vorzimer, an attorney who represents prospective parents in 
Los Angeles, says the usual six-month wait for a surrogate in 
California has vanished as well. "Many of these women have college 
loans to pay off or they want to help buy a house or provide for 
their own kids' education," says Mr. Vorzimer, who is also CEO of Egg 
Donation Inc., a recruiting agency in Encino. "But they are also 
looking to do something good for other families. And some of them say 
they love being pregnant."

Donating eggs, or carrying a baby for nine months, is by no means 
easy -- it's arduous enough that most agencies turn down women who 
are mainly in it for the money.


Discuss

    * 
<http://community.wsj.com/community/groups/health-journal-225/topics/giving-life----selling-it>Is
 
it worth $10,000 to undergo weeks of hormone injections and a 
surgical retrieval? Is $50,000 too much? Should donations be 
compensated at all? Share your thoughts and 
experiences<http://community.wsj.com/community/groups/health-journal-225/topics/giving-life----selling-it>.
 


Most accept only a tiny fraction of applicants. Candidates generally 
must be between 20 and 30 years old, of appropriate weight for their 
height and in very good health. A history of sexually-transmitted 
diseases, hepatitis, diabetes, cancer -- even depression -- are all 
disqualifiers. Candidates must undergo a battery of genetic and 
psychological tests, and meet a long list of Food and Drug 
Administration requirements for tissue donors. Among them: no tattoos 
or body piercings or past residence in various foreign countries, 
including the U.K. between 1980 and 1996 (to guard against possible 
exposure to Mad Cow disease).

And that's just to be listed on a registry. Would-be donors then wait 
to be selected by a recipient couple, which can take months or years. 
"Now that we have more donors, it's become a buyer's market," Ms. von 
Halle says. "Some people are looking for a 6-foot Swedish volleyball 
player with 39 ACTs, and they'll take their time."

Once selected, an egg donor undergoes several weeks of daily hormone 
injections to synchronize her menstrual cycle with the recipient's, 
stimulate her ovarian follicles and then ripen the eggs. Donors are 
monitored every few days with blood tests and ultrasound scans. The 
eggs are harvested using a needle through the vaginal wall, with the 
donor under general anesthesia.

Many applicants turn back once they learn what's involved. "The other 
thing is the lifestyle changes required: no drinking, no smoking, NO 
SEX ... that's the one that gets them the most," emails Darlene 
Pinkerton, executive director of A Perfect Match in San Diego, which 
offers up to $50,000 for egg donors with high SATs. She says she's 
seen a doubling of inquiries recently. The American Society for 
Reproductive Medicine considers compensation above $10,000 to be 
inappropriate; Ms. Pinkerton argues that the offer brings in donors 
who might not otherwise be interested.

There are some risks to the donor -- including possible bleeding and 
infection at the injection sites, and, in rare cases, ovarian 
hyperstimulation syndrome, in which several dozen eggs ripen at once 
and the ovaries become dangerously swollen. But careful monitoring 
can avoid that. "If egg donation is done in an experienced clinic, 
that complication rate is very, very low and the success rates are 
quite high," says Zev Rosenwaks, director of reproductive medicine at 
New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, which performs 
about 200 egg transfers per year, more than half of which result in 
live births.


Health Mailbox

People who are good at remembering numbers often have an internal 
system that they don't even realize they're using.

Sperm donation generally pays $100 or less, and also requires the 
donor to pass a battery of medical tests. The market for sperm has 
changed dramatically thanks to a procedure called ICSI, for 
intracytoplasmic sperm injection. Even when men have very low sperm 
counts or low motility, doctors can retrieve a single sperm from 
inside the testes and inject it directly into an egg. "ICSI has 
revolutionized the treatment of male infertility," says Dr. 
Rosenwaks. There is still a large market for sperm among single women 
and lesbian couples who want to conceive.

And clinics say they've seen no drop in demand for donor eggs, 
despite the economic downturn and costs that run about $20,000 per 
attempt. (Insurance covers the medical procedures in some states, but 
not the donor fees.) "The disease of infertility does not follow the 
Dow Jones average," says Sean Tipton, a spokesman for the ASRM.

Many of the couples seeking egg donors and surrogates are from 
Europe, where paying for such services is illegal and waits can 
stretch for many years.

"Annie," a 29-year-old lawyer has donated twice through Mr. 
Vorzimer's service but doesn't want her family to know. She says she 
didn't need the money: "I thought it was a great thing to do to help 
people." The first time was for an Australian couple, but the baby 
died in utero. "I was heartbroken," she says. "I was going to get to 
meet the baby and see what my kids would look like." The second 
couple wanted an anonymous arrangement, so she doesn't know if a baby 
is on the way.

Despite feeling bloated and missing a few days work, Annie says 
she'll probably donate once more. But she says being an egg donor "is 
something to seriously think about, and not just go into for the 
money. You have to ask yourself, once this process is over and 
there's this baby out there, how are you going to feel? Think about 
it -- a lot."
    * Email: <mailto:[email protected]>[email protected].


<*}}}>< <http://www.halfthekingdom.org/please%20donate.html>Donations 
are needed and very much appreciated <*}}}><
<*}}}>< <http://www.holypostage.com/>Holy Postage <*}}}><
<*}}}><<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Half the 
<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Kingdom!<*}}}><

Lord, may everything we do begin with Your inspiration and continue 
with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.


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