No US registry of egg and sperm donor births exists

The GLP aggregated and excerpted this blog/article to reflect the diversity of news, opinion and analysis. 

In 1988 the Office of Technology Assessment estimated that 30,000 children were born via donor insemination during the year 1986/87 in the U.S.

More than a quarter of a century — and no further research — later, ‘30,000 annual births’ is still trotted out in academia, lectures and the media. Sometimes the number is doubled, probably to allow for the passage of time, and occasionally a range of 30,000 – 60,000 is deployed.

Yet so much about donor insemination has changed during this time. Using either of the whole figures is scientifically unjustifiable, and the range is just as flawed.

The media, academics, and other “experts” should not be using such patently erroneous figures. Rather, they should be noting that there is no reliable method of assessing how many children are conceived via donor insemination each year. They should be pointing out that the USA has no accurate tracking or record keeping from which it is possible to make an educated assessment. And please, the media (U.S. and international) needs to understand that most people that use donor sperm do not utilize IVF!

Instead of complacently relying on outdated best guesstimate figures from more than a generation ago, they should be demanding reliable, recent figures. They should be voicing outrage that neither the fertility industry nor any other entity is required to collect data or report statistics on the numbers of human beings conceived using donor sperm.

Read full, original post: 30k-60k US Sperm and Egg Donor Births Per Year?

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