For
2 1/2 years, Sara Karklins tried very, very hard to get pregnant. In the fall
of 2010, she began the process of in-vitro fertilization – an embryo was formed
in a fertility clinic, then implanted into her uterus. The process required
megadosing with six times the amount of estrogen given to menopausal women, in
order to build up her uterine lining. For three days before each embryo
transfer, she also received progesterone injections, which left her buttock
muscles swollen, itchy and bruised. Her
mood swings were sharp and unpredictable.
Again and again, the embryos failed
to attach to Karklins’s uterus. Her fertility doctors injected a blood thinner
into her stomach every day to increase blood flow to the uterus. Twice, she
took an immunosuppressant to try and stop her body’s rejection of the embryos.
The result was a serious respiratory infection, as well as another pregnancy
failure.
Karklins,
now 32, wasn’t trying to have a baby for herself – she and her then-husband
already had two children. The never-ending schedule of pills, needles and
doctor’s appointments was for a male couple for whom she had agreed to be a
surrogate mother. And, in keeping with Canadian law, she was doing it all for
free.
“My mother
said more than once, ‘You tried, and did your best, maybe it’s time to move
on,’” says Karklins, an administrative manager at a greenhouse in Beamsville, Ont.
“But I’m stubborn.”
After 15
lost embryos in five failed attempts, Karklins felt like giving up: Not because
of personal discomfort, she says, but because she felt she was letting down the
would-be fathers. “We had tried three different egg donors – the only thing
left to take out of the equation was me,” she says.
The men
asked her to try one last time. On Easter Sunday, 2013, she was implanted with
three embryos, two of which she finally carried to term as a set of twins. “The
intended parents were there when they were born,” says Karklins. “They were the
first ones to hold them, as it should be.”
Intended
parents – or IPs – is surrogacy lingo for people using reproductive technology
to try for a biological child, and there are far more of them than there are
women willing to carry someone else’s baby for no compensation. In 2004, the
federal government passed the Assisted Human Reproduction Act, making it
illegal to pay for eggs, sperm or pregnancy. The payment ban has mostly allowed
Canada to avoid the distasteful situations common in other countries, such as
agencies promising genetically idealized gametes or babies abandoned for
supposed imperfections. It’s also resulted in an incredibly small pool of
surrogates.
Those who
remain show a curious mix of altruism and omnipotence: These are women who give
up their very bodies for complete strangers, but only after choosing a lucky
few from the desperate hordes.
For
surrogates and IPs, the process of finding one another is as indescribable and
chemical as romance. Repeatedly, both sides use the phrase “you just know.”
“For most of
them, it just didn’t feel right, but when I met my IPs, I just didn’t want to
hang up the phone,” says Kate Firth, of finding her second set of parents. The
first time Firth was planning a surrogate pregnancy, in 2011, she got two or
three e-mails from hopeful IPs a day.
After a
month of considering candidates, the Victoria mother of two chose a straight
couple from Saskatoon: a 29-year-old man and a 31-year-old woman who had become
infertile after treatment for cervical cancer. Eventually, she bore them twin
boys.
The second
time Firth, now 35, had someone else’s baby was in January, 2014 (that time, it
was twin girls). “I probably entertained five couples,” says Firth, who works
at a non-profit health-care centre. She decided on another straight couple, who
had been trying for four years to have a baby.
Firth was
inspired to become a surrogate after her twin sister, Gillian Harnum, signed up
in late 2010. “I wanted to show my children you can do something special,” says
Harnum, who lives in Halifax with her husband and two daughters.
“I didn’t
just make babies, I made a family. I made aunts, uncles and grandparents.” Both
sisters say they were deeply touched by their brother’s inability to have a
second child.
Firth met
both sets of IPs through Surrogacy in Canada Online, a 14-year-old consultancy
run by former surrogate Sally Rhoads-Heinrich, who charges IPs $3,000 for two
years of services. The most essential is access to online forums where they can
meet potential surrogates, though SCO also refers clients to lawyers, and links
them with psychologists and counsellors.
Rhoads-Heinrich’s
consultancy exists in the grey area of Canadian surrogacy law. She believes
that simply facilitating meetings, rather than matching individual women with
specific IPs, keeps her on the right side of the legal prohibition that no one
make a profit from surrogacy. She doesn’t pay her surrogates, but does send
baskets of vitamins and pregnancy tests, as well as flowers and other gifts.
Rhoads-Heinrich
says 95 per cent of SCO’s clients are heterosexual couples facing infertility
issues. The surrogates she works with must have had at least one child.
“People are
spending $20,000 on each IVF cycle,” she explains. “It’s considered ‘unproven’
to put an embryo in a woman who hasn’t been pregnant before.” The women who
work with her must be between 21 and 45, and preferably in a supportive
romantic relationship.
Unsurprisingly,
one common trait among surrogates is a tendency toward easy pregnancies. Tara
Robertson of Kingston gave birth to her first surrogate baby in mid-January
after having nine of her own children.
“I just love
being pregnant, I guess,” says Robertson, a stay-at-home mom married to a
heavy-duty-equipment mechanic.
“Creating
life, you can feel that.” At 31, Robertson has never had gestational diabetes
or high blood pressure, and all of her babies had relatively quick vaginal
births. Her doctor once suggested she become a surrogate, and in November,
2013, three weeks after her youngest son was born, she got in touch with
Surrogacy in Canada Online.
“We are so
blessed, why not do it for somebody else?” says Robertson. Her first visit to
the SCO forums was an eye-opener. “It was a little shocking and upsetting, so
many IPs and not many surrogates.”
A week after
starting to hang out on Skype with a male couple she met through SCO, Robertson
decided to have their baby.
“It’s like
meeting the man you’re going to marry,” she says. “I like their personalities,
they were bubbly and outgoing and it was easy to talk about the hard stuff,
like abortion.” She got pregnant with two embryos on her first try.
Unreserved
and quick to laugh, Robertson can’t imagine life without children. Her latest
pregnancy brought some soreness and back pain, but she didn’t get a massage:
Although Health Canada does allow surrogates to be reimbursed for undefined
“pregnancy-related expenses,” she doesn’t want to burden her IPs.
The average
cost of egg and sperm retrieval, embryo production, hormones and embryo
transfers is about $60,000, which doesn’t include pricey extras like genetic
tests to screen for debilitating or fatal conditions.
“I have
issues with using someone else’s money,” says Robertson, who worked out a
budget with her IPs for pregnancy-related travel, groceries and clothes with a
limit of about $2,000 a month.
Setting out
acceptable expenses in a contract written by a lawyer is common – Firth learned
after her first surrogate pregnancy required a cesarean section to add in extra
compensation for recovery time taken off work. SCO advises all of its IPs and
surrogates to sign a formal agreement before becoming pregnant, even though the
legal status of such contracts is debatable.
Quebec has
expressly refused to recognize them, while Alberta has determined that
surrogacy agreements are valid as evidence in legal disputes, but are not
directly enforceable. In Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and British Columbia,
provincial law accounts for the possibility a contract might exist, but whether
it’s enforceable is unclear. Everywhere else, including Ontario, there’s no
law, or precedent.
Even so,
many of those involved believe there is value in having everyone discuss their
expectations, and put them down in writing. A standard clause is that IPs will
be named as parents on the baby’s birth certificate. Contracts also outline
restrictions on foods or activities. Robertson smoked cigarettes through her
own pregnancies, but has agreed not to as a surrogate.
While she
found that request reasonable, Robertson turned down other IPs she found too
demanding. Surrogates and IPs often clash when discussing potential genetic
abnormalities or – as is often the case with IVF – whether to keep all of the
babies if more than one embryo develops.
“They wanted
to abort up to 24 weeks if there were issues but I’m not willing to abort that
late,” says Robertson. “I can’t work with someone who wants to terminate for
every single reason. I get that you want a healthy baby, but to what degree are
you asking me to play God?”
One classic
assumption about surrogacy is that women will have trouble giving up the baby.
It’s part of why the industry has moved away from traditional surrogates, who
use their own eggs to become pregnant, to gestational surrogates, who are
implanted with embryos made from donor eggs.
Rhoads-Heinrich
only works with gestational surrogates, though she says that’s mainly because
it makes things easier to automatically list IPs on birth certificates. The
consultant says that in 14 years, SCO has never had a surrogate have trouble
with attachment issues in regards to the baby.
Harnum, in
Nova Scotia, says she did experience postpartum depression after having her
most recent surrogate baby last July. Her own children and her first surrogate
baby were girls, and this was the first time she had carried a boy. “Three days
after the delivery, I had a day all by myself to cuddle him on my own,” she
says. She began to cry at the thought of him moving to Toronto until one of the
IPs told her gently that she’d definitely see the baby again.
The parents
are a gay couple with four children, and keep in regular touch with their three
surrogates as well as one of their egg donors. “I’m not giving him up, I’m
giving him back,” says Harnum.
Not all IPs
agree to stay in touch, and the emotional effect of losing contact with them is
often a surprise for surrogates. After months checking in daily with their
surrogate and perhaps sending her little gifts in the mail, the parents’
attention shifts to the baby they’ve waited so long for. Contact with the
surrogate becomes less frequent, and sometimes stops for good.
“It’s
incredible seeing two people become parents, but it becomes a realization, when
everybody’s gone and you’re left alone,” says Robertson, who was sadder than
she expected after her surrogate baby’s birth. She’d like to stay in touch with
the family, but knows that it’s impossible to predict the future. “Something
could happen down the road and I’d never see them again.”
The first
couple that Karklins worked with, in 2010, always kept her at arm’s length,
perhaps because they were from a small religious community and didn’t even tell
their own parents that they were using a surrogate. After giving birth to a
baby girl, Karklins offered to pump colostrum, the nutrient-rich first breast
milk. This made the mother noticeably uncomfortable. The IPs asked about her
health for a few weeks after the birth, but then communication tapered off.
Karklins now
gets brief updates around Christmas and at their daughter’s birthday. “It took
me a year to really let go of the hurt feelings,” she says. “Sometimes I do
wish I took more time to speak with them before offering to make a match.”
Karklins
went into her second surrogate pregnancy determined to find IPs who wanted an
ongoing relationship. She’s called Aunt Sara by the twins she bore in 2013, who
know exactly who she is. She and her children have visits with the family every
month or so, and the twins’ dads have told their extended family and friends
who she is as well.
“They have
never acted as though our journey was a secret or something to move on from
once their children were born,” says Karklins of her second set of IPs. “We
really have become friends, and that extends outside of and past the
surrogacy.”
Despite how
gruelling the pregnancy process was, the joy she feels at having helped build a
family takes precedence. If the dads want another baby some time, Karklins
would consider being their surrogate again.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/
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