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Table of Contents
For Sale
The body as commodity
Ryan Schram
Mills 169 (A26)
ryan.schram@sydney.edu.au
Wednesday, August 26, 2014
Available at: http://anthro.rschram.org/1002/5.2
Cannibal Tours
Let's watch some selected scenes from Cannibal Tours.
An editorial decision
Portland, Oregon, 1997. The Reed College Quest editors meet to discuss an inquiry about a classified ad.
It was something like this:
“WANTED Healthy female student to help bring joy to an infertile couple. Will pay $3000 plus all medical expenses for a donation of several eggs. Candidates should have a minimum GPA of 3.5 and minimum combined SAT scores of 1600.”
(GPA: grade point average, 3.5 is approximately a WAM of 80. SATs are college entrace exams. Under the old system, 1600 would have been close to an ATAR of 95.)
Meanwhile...
Wendie Wilson was a student at the University of Washington around the same time. She volunteered to give several eggs for $5000.
“It seemed a relatively small amount of my time for what seemed to be pretty decent compensation.” It was empowering (Tuller 2010).
She later founded an egg donor registry, Gifted Journeys.
Human trafficking?
A friend recalls similar ads in student publications at a university in Vancouver, British Columbia. “We had ads at my college in Canada too, even though selling eggs isn't legal there. I guess they would ship you to the US for the procedure” (personal communication, 2014).
What the ads ask for
- University students (young women who have more and better-quality ova).
- Preferred hair and eye color.
- Prefered race.
- Prefered school. Ivy-league (Harvard, Yale, etc.) schools are especially popular, as are Berkeley and Stanford.
Planet America
Unlike many countries, the sale of gametes is largely unregulated in the US, and the US has generally looser regulations on IVF and surrogacy.
How much?
One source of controversy is how much women should be paid. In general, factors influencing the fee are:
- Health and family history of disease
- Grades at university.
- SAT (university entrance) scores.
- Prestige of the university. Ivy-league (Harvard, Yale, etc.) students with good grades can be offered up to $35,000.
- One ad in a Brown University (Rhode Island) newspaper said that “an extraordinary egg donor” would be paid $50,000 (Tuller 2010).
Hmmm...
The annual cost of tuition at Brown (excluding financial aid): $59,428
Most students receive some financial aid. A typical student would be responsible for about half of this “sticker price,” or $30,000.
The argument for
Australia and Canada have banned the buying of women's ova.
One researcher says that this means that this gives infertile couples an incentive to go abroad, where there are no protections for donors (Nash 2012).
Should the US ban the sale of ova?
What are the reasons for a ban?
What are the reasons against a ban?
What else should we ban?
Compensation for plasma donation?
Works consulted
Brown University. 2014. “Cost of Attendance.” Brown University Web Site. Accessed August 26, 2014. http://www.brown.edu/about/administration/financial-aid/cost-attendance.
Cohen, I. Glenn, and Eli Y. Adashi. 2013. “Made-to-Order Embryos for Sale – A Brave New World?” New England Journal of Medicine 368 (26): 2517–19. doi:10.1056/NEJMsb1215894.
Health Canada. 2013. “Prohibitions related to Purchasing Reproductive Material and Purchasing or Selling In Vitro Embryos.” Health Canada. Last modified 18 July 2013. http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/dhp-mps/brgtherap/legislation/reprod/purchasing-achat-eng.php
Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority. 2014. “Egg Donation and Egg Sharing.” Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority. Accessed 26 August 2014. http://www.hfea.gov.uk/egg-donation-and-egg-sharing.html
Nash, Meredith. 2012. “Women who donate their eggs deserve compensation - here's why.” The Conversation, 8 November. http://theconversation.com/women-who-donate-their-eggs-deserve-compensation-heres-why-10515
Tuller, David. 2010. “Payment Offers to Egg Donors Prompt Scrutiny.” The New York Times, May 10, sec. Health. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/11/health/11eggs.html.
Zhai Xiaomei. 2004. “ABA Country Report for China, 2003” Eubios: International and Asian Journal of Bioethics 14: 5-10. http://www.eubios.info/EJ141/ej141d.htm.
