Whenever
we tamper with God's original design,
there will always be trouble.
The
Incredible, Profitable Egg
"Eggsploitation" Uncovers
Dark Side of Infertility Industry
By E. Christian Brugger
WASHINGTON,
D.C., OCT. 8, 2010 (Zenit.org).-
Dr. Robert Edwards, IVF pioneer and
recipient of the 2010 Nobel Prize in
Physiology and Medicine, first fertilized
a human egg in vitro (literally "in
glass") in 1969. The embryo died
after the first cell division. He surmised
that successful in vitro embryonic development
required the harvesting of mature eggs.
He
contacted gynecologist Patrick Steptoe,
pioneer in laparoscopy, to help him
develop a procedure. Steptoe's laparoscope
allowed him to inspect a woman's ovaries
through a small incision in the woman's
umbilical area. Edwards was able to
observe eggs maturing on the surface
of the ovary and so to harvest them
at the optimal time.
Because
of advances in reproductive technology,
laparoscopy is no longer needed
for IVF. But eggs are still needed,
for every cycle -- multiple eggs, eggs
for fertile women unwilling to use their
own, for infertile women incapable of
producing healthy eggs, for women with
polycystic ovary syndrome, for prematurely
menopausal women, for women who are
carriers of genetic conditions, for
women whose fertility has been compromised
by STDs, even for homosexual males intending
to use a surrogate. They all need eggs.
To
the infertility industry, eggs spell
enormous profit. The natural monthly
rhythm of a woman's cycle is far too
inefficient to satisfy the industry's
voracious appetite. Consequently, egg
donors are in hot demand. Infertility
programs and their egg brokers place
ads targeting young, healthy, college-aged
women, characteristically altruistic,
and short of cash, promising up to $50,000
in exchange for a carton of fresh eggs.
A few weeks is all it takes. The
risks are played down and the benefits
seem obvious.
High
dosages of fertility drugs, synthetic
hormones called gonadotropins, are administered
to superovulate the donor to produce
eggs. Soreness, breast tenderness, mood
swings, headaches and mild fluid retention
can be anticipated. But over-hyperstimulation
(called "ovarian hyperstimulation
syndrome," or OHSS) is also possible.
Should a donor be so unlucky, she might
suffer excruciating abdominal pain,
blood clots, infections, kidney failure,
loss of her ovaries, shock, and, in
rare cases, death. Oh, by the way, don't
neglect to read the fine print: If because
of complications a donor fails to deliver
a full carton, jackpot's off. After
all, a deal's a deal.
A
revealing new documentary entitled "Eggsploitation"
exposes this dark side of the infertility
industry. Written and produced by the
redoubtable Jennifer Lahl at The Center
for Bioethics and Culture Network, the
film follows the lives of several egg
donors, showcasing two in particular.
One reports that during the extraction
procedure, she became dizzy, short of
breath, her blood pressure dropped and
she experienced intense abdominal pain.
After being assured by the clinic that
she was fine, her blood pressure dropped
to the fatally low level of 40/20. She
was finally admitted to the hospital.
Another
woman experienced acute abdominal pain
following the procedure and fainted
from its intensity. When she revived,
she called the clinic and was told her
reaction was normal and not to worry.
She pressed and the clinic granted her
another appointment, this time with
a different doctor. He told her she
would be fine and sent her home. Her
condition deteriorated to the point
that she was vomiting stool. The clinic
finally concluded she had a severe case
of OHSS. Her abdominal cavity was full
of blood and her ovary swollen to the
size of a grapefruit. She had to have
her ovary surgically removed. She subsequently
contracted breast cancer and is presently
undergoing chemotherapy. The future
of her fertility is still in question.
Each case reported in this hard-hitting
documentary is more appalling than the
next.
Egg-harvesting
has gone on now for 40 years. But the
field of egg-donation is still entirely
unregulated and so these stories go
unreported and unexplored. Experts themselves
admit that there are no adequate studies
on the long-term risks of these powerful
and commonly used fertility drugs, and
yet the casualties they cause aren't
hard to find. Some studies even suggest
they might increase a woman's risk for
developing ovarian cancer later in life;
and anecdotal evidence, as illustrated
above, suggests a connection to breast
cancer; but solid data has yet to be
collected.
Why?
Why does the proud scion of the laureate
Robert Edwards -- the infertility industry
-- routinely place women at risk and
deprive them of adequately informed
consent? With questions such as these
left unanswered, women considering egg
donation might want to think again.
For
more information on the film, to watch
the trailer, or to order your copy visit
www.eggsploitation.com
*
* *
E.
Christian Brugger is a Senior Fellow
of Ethics at the Culture
of Life Foundation and
is an associate professor of moral theology
at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary
in Denver, Colorado. He received his
Doctorate in Philosophy from Oxford
in 2000.
"For to me to live is Christ, and
to die is gain." (Phil 1:21)