When a
woman becomes a surrogate to enable others to have a baby, new relationships
are formed. Research carried out by the Centre of Family Research, University of Cambridge , suggests that many of these
relationships flourish. The research was
presented at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE)
conference in London .
Surrogacy,
the process whereby a woman carries and gives birth to a baby for an infertile
couple, has become a more widely-accepted way of building a family, helped in
part by media coverage of its use by high-profile celebrities. Commercially
arranged surrogacy is illegal in the UK and many surrogates, most of
whom have children of their own, are motivated by the desire to help others
have a family.
To date there
has been limited research into the long-term impact of surrogacy on the adults
and children involved in the process, but now a study at the Centre for Family
Research is looking at whether, and how, surrogacy affects family
relationships.
Dr Vasanti
Jadva and PhD candidate Susan Imrie of the Centre for Family Research presented
findings from a two-year ESRC-funded research project which looks at the
experiences of surrogacy from a range of perspectives including that of the
partners and children of surrogates as well as surrogates themselves.
The
research is based on in-depth interviews with 34 surrogates, 36 children of
surrogates and 11 partners of surrogates. Twenty of the surrogates had been
interviewed by Dr Jadva more than ten years ago in a previous project which
looked at the psychological wellbeing and experiences of surrogates one year
after the birth of the surrogacy child.
The participation of these women allowed the researchers to track
relationships over time, adding a valuable dimension to the study.
The
findings paint a largely positive picture of the relationships between the
surrogate and her own family, and between these individuals and the families
created through surrogacy.
“Our
research shows that in the majority of cases, relationships formed as a result
of surrogacy are valued and enjoyed by surrogates and sustained over time,”
said Dr Jadva. The study found that
surrogates stayed in touch with the majority of the surrogacy children (77 per
cent) and with most of the parents (85 per cent of mothers, 76 per cent of
fathers). Of the surrogates who had chosen to maintain contact with the
surrogacy families, most would meet in person once or twice a year.
Most of the
surrogates’ own children (86 per cent) had a positive view of their mothers’
involvement in surrogacy. Almost half (47 per cent) were in contact with the
surrogacy child all of whom reported a good relationship with him or her. A
significant number of surrogates’ children referred to the child as a sibling
or a half sibling.
Interestingly,
the type of surrogacy did not affect how the surrogacy child was viewed by the
surrogates’ own children and did not appear to have a bearing on whether the
experience was seen as positive or negative by those involved.
Susan Imrie
said: “It is clear that the children of surrogate mothers do not experience any
negative consequences as a result of their mother’s decision to be a surrogate
and that this was irrespective of whether or not the surrogate used her own
egg. In fact, most of the children we
spoke to were supportive of their mother being a surrogate and were proud of
what she’d achieved.” Surrogacy offers a means of having children to a growing
number of couples experiencing fertility problems or unable to conceive.
No comments:
Post a Comment