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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Appalling Ukrainian surrogacy case

79 replies

RedToothBrush · 08/06/2024 07:45

https://www.thetimes.com/world/russia-ukraine-war/article/couple-face-spending-months-in-kyiv-to-claim-their-baby-h2fnqtn62
‘We’ll be trapped in a war zone’: couple face months in Kyiv to claim their baby
Fliss and Memet Demir are travelling to the Ukrainian capital, where a surrogate mother is due to deliver the child

Particularly appalling article on a surrogacy in Ukraine without any comment on the mother or the fact it's commercial surrogacy which is illegal here.

Couple can't have children because woman had cancer five years ago. She's still on hormone medication.

They sent embryos to Ukraine in 2021 but they were implanted only in Autumn last year.

They are whinging because the British government withdrew the emergency passport scheme for surrogate babies born in Ukraine to discourage the continued trade. So they now have to go to Ukraine and apply for a passport in person which might take 16 weeks and this is so awful because they might die. They have been told they won't be fast tracked and they should not travel to Ukraine by the government.

This emergency scheme was withdrawn in August. You'll note this is prior to the surrogate being implanted.

They didn't want to do surrogacy in the UK because
The couple were concerned about surrogacy in the UK, which has been long criticised for its poor legal framework. Demand also far outstrips supply because surrogates can not be paid except for expenses, so they turned to Ukraine, where surrogacy costs about £40,000 and their parental rights would be immediately acknowledged.

Natalie Gamble, a solicitor at NGA Law, a specialist reproduction firm, said Ukraine had been a popular choice for British parents before the Russian invasion because of its clear surrogacy laws and established agencies. In contrast, the “murky and fudged” UK law initially treats the surrogate and her spouse as parents, making everyone nervous, she said.

Two attempts to implant the couple’s embryos failed and, devastated, Demir and her husband explored surrogacy in the UK. They attended charity events to meet potential philanthropic surrogates, but said the process felt like speed dating.
^^
Mr Demir says: “They tell you to try and arrange social events, barbecues, to meet surrogates. The charity organising it, they say, ‘Fliss, you need to work on your social media profile, just put up pictures with nice people’. It just felt like a popularity contest.”

Demir was still going through treatment, and her body had started rejecting one of the breast implants. She was having weekly injections to remove a litre of fluid from the breast, and was rushed to A&E because of infections.

“I was so unwell, we were just broken,” she says. “And there’s all these fresh-faced lovely couples who also want a baby. The surrogate is going to pick them, not the woman who might die of cancer.”

They did not get a surrogate offer, and began to come to terms they would never have a child. War had broken out in Ukraine, and they feared their remaining two embryos were lost.

But in the autumn, after the situation stabilised, the surrogate agency got in touch with the option of trying again. Demir recalls: “We thought, it’s our final chance, what have we got to lose? Desperate people do desperate things.”

So no thought to the surrogate and just how exploitative this is. Or the risk to their unborn child.

Just a tantrum that THEY will now have to travel to Ukraine and won't get special treatment and how it's dreadfully unfair to their British daughter that they have to wait up to 16 weeks for a passport

Plenty of time to reflect on conditions when they've been told

Doctors have asked that they bring everything for their baby, including bed sheets, because supplies are scarce. The couple, who have never been to Ukraine, chose a hotel because it had a generator and a bomb shelter.

Of course 16 weeks in Ukraine is not acceptable for them because the wife can only get 3 months of hormone therapy from the NHS. And this is putting her health as risk.

Nothing about the conditions their daughter will be born in and how risky / awful that might be for the mother. It was perfectly fine for their daughter to be at risk from the war during the pregnancy, but it's somehow dreadful that they have to go there themselves and wait around.

If Ukraine is good enough for them to have a surrogacy pregnancy in, then it's good enough for them to travel to as well. Who deliberately creates a baby in these circumstances and then has the brass neck to complain that they will also have to experience the war zone first hand.

The staggering selfishness is off the scale. The article doesn't reflect on it at all - just that our surrogacy laws aren't lax enough so it's driving couples abroad.

If we tightened our laws here to recognise this as people trafficking then maybe that would give pause for thought because these 'respectable' couples go abroad because our lax laws allow us to do so. We should and could criminalise this. 'Respectable couples' are precisely the ones who should be clamped down on precisely because they are less likely to try and damage their status by acting in a criminal manner.

On the plus side I'm glad the government has said no fuck off to special treatment - they withdrew the emergency scheme to stop twats like this for good reason. These dickheads made a choice to go ahead in the middle of a war after the scheme was withdrawn so I'm all out of fucks to give to them.

At least the article may act as a deterrent for others. That's the only positive.

Monsters.

‘We’ll be trapped in a war zone’: couple face months in Kyiv to claim their baby

Fliss and Memet Demir are travelling to the Ukrainian capital, where a surrogate mother is due to deliver the child

https://www.thetimes.com/world/russia-ukraine-war/article/couple-face-spending-months-in-kyiv-to-claim-their-baby-h2fnqtn62

OP posts:
duc748 · 13/06/2024 14:04

That Massachusetts law is horrifying. If that's the way the centre-left is going in the US, God help us all.

TheClogLady · 13/06/2024 14:32

lcakethereforeIam · 13/06/2024 13:44

I read this article recently about other dangerous side effects of domperidone

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/article/2024/may/30/the-darkest-period-of-my-life-i-struggled-to-breastfeed-then-a-drug-sent-me-spiralling

Isn't it excreted in the breast milk?

Gosh, what an awful experience.

I’m utterly horrified that she took it for the best part of a year! And obtaining high doses via a patchwork of NHS prescription, online purchase in multiple names (because you can only buy 30 x 10mg pills at a time) AND a private prescription meant no HCP was fully aware of how much she was ingesting and for how long.

The Internet has a lot to answer for re: supply of grey market medications, doctor shopping and ‘peer support’ that is more akin to self harm than actual support (not just for breastfeeding but for gender medication & weightloss etc too).

I hope she’s ok now (as an aside, I wonder if anyone ever suggested she use formula in an at-breast supplementer? Best thing I’ve known for getting supply going as baby gets satiated while learning to nurse, mum can see baby is getting fed, mum’s body is getting the ‘make milk’ signals and both mum and baby have the closeness of breastfeeding without the stress associated with insufficient supply. It’s clunky and awkward to get used to and perhaps a bit off putting as a concept but the reality can be really really good).

DysonSphere · 13/06/2024 18:58

TheClogLady · 13/06/2024 13:24

the Drug used for that, domperidone, has to be used in large doses (much bigger than the dose for gastric problems) and is associated with serious heart problems.

https://www.gov.uk/drug-safety-update/domperidone-risks-of-cardiac-side-effects

it’s still useful for some really limited breastfeeding applications but only in the very short term (eg to get supply going when trying to pump for an extremely premature baby or in conjunction with a tongue tie release procedure to get feeding established a couple of weeks outside of the normal immediate post-birth time frame) but the doses required for the duration required to adequately feed an infant long term without a pregnancy at all is unnecessarily risky for the woman.

Why go to the effort of human trafficking a baby if you are then going to risk sudden death due to huge quantities of off label drugs? Baby could lose both bio mum
and the woman raising them, double head fuck for the kid.

Same goes for the woman in the article - I say this as the daughter of a BRCA2 mum who died in her early 50s. My mum had already had two kids in her 20s long before diagnosis in her 40s, so we were both young adults when we lost her. Still fucked both my sister and I up to deal with motherloss so young.

Buying a baby at 40 when you know you don’t have an average life expectancy is especially selfish.

I have massive sympathy for any woman grappling with cancer and/or family history cancer risk, I had that cloud over my own head too (I did not inherit the gene fault but didn’t know this until 15 years after my mother’s death) but buying a baby from
a war zone isn’t an appropriate way to deal with this particular stroke of shitty luck.

Of course prospective surrogate mothers with a choice in who to gestate for will quickly rule out anyone who is unlikely to be around to raise a baby to full adulthood!

Ahh I had wrongly assumed it was simply case of once milk supply is initiated the effect would be continuous with regular baby suckling stimulation, and further drug use therefore unnecessary.

I can see it is something you would have to take continuously throughout.

I am confused as to why this is, but then I'm not a doctor. With normal pregnancy (assuming everything goes well) after the initial 'come down' the body seems to realise it is needed constantly - of course unless you intentionally stop which can be difficult -

Interesting. Certainly not ideal for a child or the surrogate mother.

Thanks @TheClogLady

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