Northwestern University Law Review : Colloquy : 2009 : Cahn & CollinsEight Is EnoughNaomi R. Cahn & Jennifer M. Collins[*] Introduction On January 26, 2009, the nation's second set of live-born octuplets was delivered at a California hospital.[1] The public fascination with this unusual event quickly turned ugly when the media revealed that the new mother was thirty-three-year-old Nadya Suleman, a single, unemployed woman already caring for six other children under the age of eight. As Ellen Goodman of the Boston Globe described it, upon discovery of Suleman's identity, the mood of the country went "from 'Gee whiz' to 'Are you kidding?'" in a matter of days.[2] The reaction to Nadya Suleman's new family stands in stark contrast to the enthusiastic reception for many other families with high-order multiples. For example, the cable show Jon & Kate Plus 8, which features a family with a set of sextuplets and a set of twins, is currently one of cable television's highest-rated shows.[3] The McCaughey septuplets, born in 1997, are similarly famous: for example, they celebrate their birthdays each year with Dateline reporter Ann Curry.[4] Indeed, public fascination with high-birth families dates back at least to the famous Dionne quintuplets of the 1930s, who were treated as a tourist attraction by the Canadian government and who were visited by more than three million people over a ten-year span.[5] Compare the reactions to Nadya Suleman's story. The medical director of the Center for Human Reproduction termed the births a "medical catastrophe."[6] A columnist for the Los Angeles Times called her story "grotesque" and "bizarre," and criticized her "manifest irresponsibility."[7] A San Francisco writer deemed her "misguided and clearly troubled."[8] Even her own parents vehemently criticized Suleman; her father called her "'absolutely irresponsible[]'" and questioned her mental stability,[9] while Nadya's mother described her actions as "'unconscionable.'"[10] The cultural backlash
against Suleman has focused on three separate but related issues. The first set of concerns revolves around
Suleman herself—specifically,
her ability to parent fourteen young children.
Disclosures about Suleman's background came fast and furious after the
children's birth: she is single, she is unemployed, she has been receiving
disability payments for several years, at least two of her older children receive
Supplemental Security Income (SSI) payments and thus may have some kind of
special needs, and while undergoing her most recent fertility treatment, she
lived with her parents in a three-bedroom house that may be going into
foreclosure.[11] Judgments about her race, explicitly acknowledged
or not, may also be a factor.[12] Her defenders see these criticisms against
Suleman as a form of "mother-blaming."[13] A second set of
concerns revolves around the medical procedures that led to the octuplets'
birth. The fertility clinic that treated
Suleman agreed to implant her with at least six embryos during an in vitro
fertilization (IVF) procedure. The
leading fertility industry group asserts that this decision was contrary to its
recommended guidelines that women under the age of thirty-five have no more
than two embryos implanted during any single IVF attempt.[14]
A final set of issues
concerns more fundamental questions about screening parents. Many wonder how a clinic could agree to
provide a single mother of six with a fertility treatment that might—and
did—double
her number of children. This particular
debate echoes larger cultural concerns over the changing American family,
including calls for two parents (one of each sex) for every child. In response to these
concerns, commentators and legislators are calling for new, more restrictive
regulation of the fertility industry.
Shortly after the octuplets were born, Georgia Right to Life helped get
legislation introduced that would limit the number of eggs that could be
fertilized in any IVF cycle to no more than the number that would be
transferred into the woman.[15]
In Missouri, legislation was introduced to impose limits on the number
of embryos that could be implanted.[16] Although the debate about whether and how to regulate the fertility industry is certainly not new,[17] Suleman's story has thrown two kinds of proposals into particularly sharp relief. The first set of proposals seeks to increase regulation of assisted reproductive technologies ("ART") via the doctors that perform them. For example, some commentators urge the United States to adopt mandatory limits on the number of embryos that can be implanted, as other countries have done.[18] Although the American Society of Reproductive Medicine has issued guidelines regarding the appropriate number of embryos to transfer, adherence is entirely voluntary and, quite obviously, not universal. The issues entwined with such restrictions are difficult and important, and the Suleman case has begun a conversation about more meaningful regulation of the medical procedures used by the fertility industry. Indeed, as we develop further below, we support several such initiatives.[19] We are far more troubled, however, by a second set of proposals arising out of the Suleman backlash: those that urge placing restrictions on which individuals may receive fertility treatment. Margaret Somerville, founder of the McGill Centre for Medicine, Ethics, and Law, argues that we should regulate access to reproductive technology in the same way that we regulate access to adoption.[20] In her opinion, if a "single woman with six children" and "living with her parents" would not be permitted to adopt a child, then she should not be permitted to receive fertility treatments such as IVF either.[21] Under this theory, women with a certain number of children, or with limited financial resources, should be precluded from receiving fertility treatment. Somerville also suggests that a patient's age, and perhaps her marital status, should be relevant considerations. Some ART providers have already tried to impose access limitations on the basis of sexual orientation.[22] Indeed, many ART clinicians say they would choose to reject patients based on their marital status or sexual orientation,[23] and some states have laws that permit the use of reproductive technology only by married couples.[24] Issues related to
access are also weighty and difficult, but our conclusion here differs from our
position about regulating the medical procedures themselves: neither fertility
clinics nor the state should be in the business of restricting access to
reproductive technology. We do not require
financial litmus tests or impose limits on family size for individuals who are
able to conceive without reproductive technology, and we do not believe that requiring
some medical assistance in order to conceive means that infertile individuals
should have to tolerate such restrictions. Perhaps the most
difficult question raised by the Suleman case and other high-order births is
whether government regulation can be justified at all in the context of
ART. Before evaluating each set of
proposals in further detail, we turn first to this threshold issue. I. Should We Regulate? There is a powerful case to be made that the law should abstain from regulating ART entirely. ART involves extraordinarily personal social and medical choices, and raises critical issues related to patient autonomy and freedom of reproductive choice. Moreover, the cultural stigma traditionally associated with infertility may argue for less public attention to these issues. Nevertheless, we believe that some limited regulation is justifiable. A. Patient Autonomy We begin with the question of patient autonomy, the idea that individuals ordinarily have the right to determine for themselves the most appropriate course of medical treatment. Doctors may not, for example, treat a patient without her consent, and patients have a right to be informed of the relevant risks and benefits of any medical procedure before undergoing it.[25] But there have always been limitations to this core principle of autonomy. Patients do not have a right to receive medical procedures or medications that the Food and Drug Administration has deemed unsafe,[26] and they do not have the right to compel others to undertake risks, such as submitting to bone marrow transplants, in order to further their own health agendas. Indeed, federal and state governments often cite the need to regulate risk in justifying limitations on individual autonomy. Better-known examples of such limitations include mandatory vaccinations, speed limits, and seatbelt and helmet laws. Autonomy has thus always been modified by risk, and we believe it is that principle that is relevant in the ART context. When a patient undergoes an ART procedure that results in high-order multiples, two sets of health risks are created: one to the mother and one to the children. Mothers carrying high-order multiples face increased risks of pregnancy complications and even death.[27] Children who are part of a multiple birth are far more likely to be born premature and at a low birth weight. Prematurity and low birth weight are associated with higher risks of infant death and a host of other impairments, including "cerebral palsy[,] vision and hearing problems[,] and long-term motor, cognitive, behavioral, social-emotional, health, and growth problems."[28] Choices about the appropriate number of embryos to implant are therefore neither necessarily benign nor neutral—they carry the very real potential for adverse consequences. Importantly, these adverse consequences are not limited to the patient herself; rather, the ART patient's choices also create risk for third parties: the children who might be born as a result of the pregnancy attempt.[29] It is this potential risk to third parties, against which any potential children are obviously unable to defend, that seems to outweigh concerns for patient autonomy and to justify at least minimal government intervention. In addition to patient autonomy, however, are other values that compete against the health risks to mother and children. B. Reproductive Choice The principle of
freedom in matters of reproductive choice is also of paramount concern in
discussing restrictions on ART procedures, and we do not believe that anything
we say here should serve as a basis for retreating from that principle. In
this context, however, we believe that the sort of regulations we endorse below
do not impinge upon the core values undergirding reproductive freedom. At its essence, protecting women's reproductive
freedom means that women must retain the right to decide whether or not they
want to reproduce, and we must therefore analyze any new proposed regulations
to be sure they do not infringe upon this essential right.[30] Regulating the number
of embryos that may be transferred during IVF procedures does not, of course,
compel a woman to reproduce against her will, so that concern is not implicated
by placing restrictions on ART. But embryo
transfer restrictions may indeed reduce the likelihood that a woman will be
able to successfully reproduce.
This is an important and powerful counter-argument to ART regulation: if
transferring more embryos increases the chance of a successful pregnancy, then
perhaps government regulation should not stand in the way. Just as personal autonomy is modulated by
risk, however, reproductive freedom is modulated by concerns for the rights and
freedom of others. We do not allow
individuals to become parents at any cost; an individual may quite obviously
not appropriate another person's child in order to become a parent, nor force
another woman to serve as a surrogate mother.
Society has always been willing to draw some line that it will not cross
in furthering any particular individual's quest to become a parent. In determining where to draw that line, society should strive to protect an individual's interest in becoming a parent, while simultaneously protecting society's interests in healthy children through appropriate market regulation—regulation that will guard, for example, against power and informational imbalances. Discussions about the number of embryos to be transferred during IVF, the amount of ART-related recordkeeping, informed consent requirements, and measures for keeping the market safe may potentially move the United States toward this goal. There has historically been comparatively little oversight of the fertility industry, so these discussions are long overdue. Understanding the reasons the government has thus far abstained from regulation, however, will help frame future decisions. II. Existing Regulations and New Proposals Regarding Medical Procedures We turn now to a brief discussion of existing laws regulating assisted reproduction. We then consider whether new regulation of the medical procedures themselves might be appropriate, before turning in the next section to questions regarding regulation of access to ART technology. A. The Current Lay of the Law Currently, regulation over reproductive technology by the state and federal government is limited. The fertility industry mostly self regulates through nonbinding guidelines and suggested ethical practices, though there are various physician licensing requirements.[31] There are numerous possible reasons for this comparative lack of oversight, including the tendency for scientific advances to outpace the law, the limited use of reproductive technology until the 1980s, and the secrecy and stigma surrounding infertility. Moreover, reproductive technology taps into deeply conflicting cultural perspectives on parenthood outside of the nuclear, biological family and other controversial social issues,[32] such as stem cell research, abortion, and even sex itself. Nevertheless, over the
past several decades, the federal government has taken some steps toward
regulation—today,
it oversees clinical laboratory services, drugs, and medical devices used in
IVF treatments; has standards that establish safe use of human tissue, such as
donor sperm and eggs; and provides monitoring of fertility clinic success rates
to protect ART consumers from fraudulent advertisements.[33] Federal law does not otherwise regulate the
medical procedures involved in donation. The ART industry has also engaged in some self-regulation,[34] developing a series of ethical guidelines that contain advice and standards on topics that go beyond basic ART medical practice to include such complex issues as patient screening.[35] Although most reproductive endocrinologists follow these standards, they are not, as the Suleman case so nicely illustrates, binding. The occasional ART "mix-ups" that make their way into newspapers or courts remind consumers and the public at large of the general lack of oversight.[36] By contrast, many European countries take a far more restrictive approach, with laws primarily designed to protect embryos[37] —as does the new proposed Georgia law. Our proposed regulations are justified instead by concerns for the infertile patient and her future children, and for the ethical fertility doctor who does not want to transfer six embryos.[38] The Suleman case highlights some of the most pressing areas where regulation is needed, such as the number of embryos transferred, the need for standardized informed consent, and the role of insurance. The case also, somewhat paradoxically, shows one area where we should not regulate: access to ART procedures.[39] This Essay focuses on the embryo limit and access issues, two of the most criticized aspects of the Suleman case. B. New Ways to Regulate We support limits on
the number of embryos transferred in
any single ART procedure, although we would not impose limits on the number of
embryos created in any cycle. The risks posed to both patients and future
children are too great, and the countervailing pressure for both doctors and
patients to achieve a pregnancy too strong, to remain unaddressed. The American Society for Reproductive
Medicine (ASRM) guidelines, developed by fertility practitioners, articulate
the parameters of workable guidelines, and build in some flexibility to ensure
that they are appropriately sensitive to the situation of each patient. For example, consider the current ASRM
guideline that no more than two embryos should be transferred into a patient
under the age of 35 "in the absence of extraordinary circumstances."[40] A regulation that mirrors this directive
leaves room for exemptions—a thirty-four-year-old woman might be able to establish,
for example, that due to a repeated history of unsuccessful attempts or poor
embryo quality, she should be allowed to transfer three embryos on her last ART
attempt. The need to reconcile generally binding guidelines with the potential for flexibility suggests that some sort of administrative agency may ultimately be the best mechanism for ART regulation. One possibility is to create an entity modeled on the British Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, a board-directed governmental organization whose members include representatives from various stakeholding constituencies.[41] A second is Professor Marsha Garrison's suggestion that we look toward a "quasi-public regulatory system," like that in place in the organ transplant context.[42] This quasi-public system could be responsible for reviewing appeals from patients who believe they warrant exceptions from the guidelines. Each of these alternatives involves creating a federal agency, which ensures that any new ART guidelines are national rather than state-based. This is critical, given the ease with which patients could travel between jurisdictions to circumvent unwelcome state restrictions. Such an agency could also implement enforcement mechanisms targeted at fertility clinics by imposing fines and handling de-accreditation proceedings. There are powerful
objections to mandatory regulation. As
stated above, the higher risks for both mothers and children associated with
multiple births provide the primary justification for exploring a new
regulatory approach to ART, but it does not necessarily follow that federal
government regulation is the best approach.
Perhaps we should instead respect the traditional sanctity of the
doctor-patient relationship and rely upon physicians to self-regulate, or allow
states to experiment with different types of regulation before establishing
federal standards. After all, we
currently have a healthy tort system to bring medical malpractice claims, and,
in addition to the industry's own organizations, there are state medical boards
that could potentially sanction their members (indeed, the California medical
board is investigating Suleman's physician). Ultimately, however, we cannot rely on doctors who perform ART to self-regulate. How can a doctor, who has treated a patient through repeatedly unsuccessful pregnancy attempts, be expected to resist a desperate plea to implant just one more embryo?[43] Further, interference in the doctor-patient relationship is hardly unprecedented. Even if patients plead for them, doctors cannot legally prescribe medications that are not FDA-approved; nor can doctors enroll patients in medical studies without complying with informed consent guidelines. It is clear, moreover, that voluntary guidelines have not worked—statistics from 2006, the most recent available, show that almost 4% of ART pregnancies involved three fetuses or more.[44] In sum, when procedures are deemed sufficiently risky, government regulation has traditionally intervened in the doctor-patient relationship, and we believe the risks here are sufficiently great to allow that imposition. III. Proposals Regarding Access Opening the door to
any regulation potentially brings its own set of problems, including increasing
financial pressures, inducing patients to travel, and, critically, inducing
states to impose regulations on access to ART.
We now turn to these issues. A. Financial Considerations Although we advocate
more regulation, we recognize the critical role of compassion for patients
experiencing infertility. Infertility is
one of the most difficult life challenges an individual can encounter,[45]
and we believe we must do more to facilitate access to treatment. Any new ART regulations must therefore be
coupled with increased insurance coverage.
Indeed, one of the reasons that individuals are willing to risk their
own health and that of their future children by transferring a large number of
embryos is because each individual IVF procedure is so expensive that a patient
may only be able to afford one or at most two attempts. If patients knew that insurance would cover
multiple IVF attempts, the temptation to gamble on any single procedure would
be greatly reduced. June Carbone and Paige Gottheim suggest another potential problem with regulation: imposing limits on embryo transfers might cause us to "lose[] control of the activity altogether" by driving women underground to black market fertility clinics or overseas to doctors who will comply with their treatment preferences.[46] These are legitimate concerns, but our proposal to increase insurance coverage will allay many of them. Most women are not seeking to transfer five embryos because they want quintuplets; they are transferring five embryos because they want a successful pregnancy. If women knew that multiple attempts with one or two embryos would be covered by insurance, they would feel less pressed to travel overseas or to engage in illegal fertility treatments.[47] B. Restrictions on Access Another powerful
objection to regulation is the concern that opening the door to any kind
of government interference in fertility treatments will also open the door to
restrictions on ART access, issues that are surfacing in the wake of the
Suleman case.[48] We do not believe that any new government
regulations should include rules that restrict access to fertility treatment by
discriminating among potential patients.
Clinics should not screen on the basis of preexisting family size, the
financial resources available to care for any children born as a result of ART,
or the marital status or sexual orientation of potential patients.[49] Individuals able to conceive without reproductive
technology are not subject to such restrictions before they expand their
families. Indeed, we are confident that
any general attempt to impose limits on family size, such as China's one-child
policy, would be greeted with horror by the American public. For patients who are single or in a same-sex
relationship, the state should not be in the position of barring access to
parenthood. There is simply no rational
basis for doing so.[50] Virtually all states, for example, permit gay
and lesbian parents to serve as foster parents and to adopt; allowing access to
reproductive technology is entirely comparable. Commentators might respond that ART is more like adoption than natural childbirth, and that while restrictions on family size have no place in the nation's bedrooms, they do have a place in the nation's medical labs and fertility clinics.[51] Margaret Somerville, for example, argues that adoption is the better comparison for ART because "in both cases the resulting families are deliberately constructed with state assistance, rather than simply occurring naturally."[52] Similarly, Professor Garrison argues that the laws on adoption are an "obvious source of policy guidance" for ART regulation.[53] These assumptions are
questionable. First, most families
wrestling in silence with the challenge of infertility, paying for treatment
out-of-pocket and unaided by insurance coverage, would surely question the view
that their family's construction is a state struggle rather than a purely private
one. To the extent that the state
provides "assistance," it provides similar help to any family involved with
health care. Families that conceive "naturally"
benefit from "state assistance" to research and medical facilities. "Natural
parents" give birth in state-run hospitals and enjoy the fruits of government
research on matters of prenatal and early childhood care no less than
successful ART patients. More fundamentally, we
think families created via ART are not, contrary to Professor Garrison's
argument, truly analogous to families formed by adoption. Instead, the better comparison is to families
created without physician intervention.
Unlike ART, adoption is fundamentally concerned with actual children,
not medical decisions.[54] First, adoption inherently requires legal
determinations that are solely within the power of the state—to grant an
adoption, the state must terminate, and then reassign, parental rights. Second, adoptions increasingly involve the
wishes of biological mothers. Consider
the significant involvement teenaged Juno had with the would-be adoptive
parents of her baby in the 2007 eponymous movie, for example.[55] Even when donors are involved in reproductive
technology, that level of interaction between the parties is literally
unheard-of. Third, adoption regulations
necessarily focus on the best interests of a living child,[56]
and it is appropriate to consider the best alternatives for that particular
child. In the ART context, we are
obviously talking about potential children.
Restricting a patient's access, by definition, means that the future
children in question will never be born.
The possibility of
regulation potentially raises complex morality-based issues concerning the
scope of government control over families.
We believe the government should focus on regulating medical procedures, not family formation. Conclusion Ultimately, we need to
adopt regulations that support the fertility industry while also protecting the
interests of patients, children, and the public. Artificial reproductive technology has
provided enormous comfort to people who want children. That does not mean, however, that we should
not prevent doctors and their patients from creating instant families of
eight-plus. The risks to patients and
their future children are simply too great to allow us to continue to rely upon
purely voluntary guidelines that have been demonstrably unsuccessful. At the same time, neither the state nor
individual fertility clinics should be in the business of deciding which
individuals are sufficiently "fit" to receive fertility treatments. Narrowly tailored regulation must be designed
both to prevent abusive uses of ART procedures that endanger women and future
children, and to ensure that patients themselves make the central decision of
whether to become parents. Indeed,
regulations are essential for the future of a vibrant and successful fertility
industry and vibrant and healthy families. ———— *. Naomi Cahn is John Theodore Fey Research Professor of Law, George Washington University Law School. Jennifer Collins is Associate Professor of Law, Wake Forest University. Our thanks go to Clare Huntington and Adam Charnes for their very helpful comments. We would also like to thank Rich McPherson for invaluable research assistance. 1. Remarkably,
the doctors were surprised by the arrival of octuplets; they had only been
expecting to deliver seven babies. CNN, Octuplets'
Births Surprise California Doctors, CNNHealth.com,
Jan. 27, 2009, http://www.cnn.com/2009/HEALTH/01/26/california.octuplets/
(link). 2. Ellen
Goodman, The Ethical Failures of Fertility Treatment, BostonGlobe.com, Feb. 6, 2009,
http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2009/02/06/the_ethical_failures_of_fertility_treatment/
(link). 3. See
Susan Stewart, Big Brood Spawns Big Ratings, NYTimes.com, Feb. 12, 2009,
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/15/arts/television/15stew.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=octuplets+stewart&st=nyt
(link).
4. See,
e.g., Ann Curry, Eight is Great for the McCaughey Septuplets,
MSNBC.com, Jan. 15, 2006,
http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/10867824/ (describing Curry's visit to the
children for their eighth birthday) (link);
Ann Curry, After Ten Years, New
Adventures for Septuplets, Dec. 12, 2007,
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22223331/ (link). 5. See
The Dionne Quintuplets: A Depression-Era Freak Show, CNN.com, Nov. 19, 1997,
http://www.cnn.com/US/9711/19/dionne.quints/ (describing how the Canadian
government removed the girls from their parents and housed them at "Quintland,"
earning the government and nearby businesses around a half-billion dollars in
profits) (link). 6. Posting of Judith Graham to Triage, Doctors on the Octuplets: It's Medical
Negligence, Feb. 5, 2009,
http://newsblogs.chicagotribune.com/triage/2009/02/doctors-on-the-octuplets-a-medical-catastrophe.html
(reporting comments of Dr. Norbert Gleicher) (link). 7. Tim
Rutten, The Excesses of Nadya Suleman,
LATimes.com, Feb. 11, 2009,
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-rutten11-2009feb11,0,1768472.column
(link). 8. Debra
J. Saunders, Dysfunctional Familymaking,
SFGate.com, Feb. 8, 2009,
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/02/08/INRC15MOCA.DTL (link). 9. See
Octuplet Grandfather to Oprah: I Question
Her Mental Situation, The Huffington
Post, Feb. 20, 2009,
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/02/19/octuplet-grandfather-to-o_n_168448.html
(link). 10. See
Octuplets' Grandmother
Criticizes Daughter, Associated
Press, Feb. 9, 2009, available at http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29098465/
(link). 11. See,
e.g., Rutten, supra note 7;
Octuplet Grandfather to Oprah: I Question
Her Mental Situation, supra note
9. 12. See Bridget J. Crawford & Lolita
Buckner Innis, Multiple Anxieties:
Breaching Race, Class, and Gender Norms with Assisted Reproduction (Cleveland-Marshall
Legal Studies Paper, No. 1360453, Mar. 19, 2009), available at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1360453
(link). 13. See, e.g., id. 14. See Am.
Soc'y Reprod. Med., Guidelines on Numbers
of Embryos Transferred, 90 Fertility
& Sterility S163, S163 (2008) (link). 15. See
Ethical Treatment of Human Embryos Act, S.B. 169, 150th Gen. Assem., 1st Reg. Sess. (Ga. 2009) (link). 16. See H.B. 810, 95th Gen. Assem., 1st Reg.
Sess. (Mo. 2009) (requiring compliance with the American Society of
Reproductive Medicine's recommendations on implantation) (link).
Placing limits on assisted reproductive technology ("ART") procedures
can be part of a "right to life" agenda because of
beliefs that embryos are persons and that ART is morally wrong. Accordingly, arguments for regulating ART
risk alignment with an anti-abortion agenda, and must be crafted
carefully. See, e.g., William Saletan, Crocktuplets: Hijacking the Octuplets Backlash to Restrict
IVF, Slate, Mar. 4, 2009,
http://www.slate.com/id/2212876/pagenum/all/ (arguing that the chief purpose of
the Georgia bill is not to "help women" but "to establish legal rights for embryos")
(link). 17. See
Naomi R. Cahn, Test Tube Families: Why
the Fertility Market Needs Legal Regulation (2009); Debora L. Spar, The Baby Business: How Money,
Science, and Politics Drive the Commerce of Conception (2006). 18. See,
e.g., Radhika Rao, Equal
Liberty: Assisted Reproductive Technology and Reproductive Equality, 76 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 1457, 1458–59 (2008)
(describing German and Italian regulatory schemes) (link). 19. We
save for another piece, however, detailed answers to many questions in this
area, such as issues relating to how to regulate sperm, egg, and embryo donors,
including both anonymous donors and those known to the recipient, and what to
do about insurance. 20. See
Margaret Somerville, Examining Society's Role, OttawaCitizen.com, Feb. 11, 2009,
http://www.ottawacitizen.com/opinion/Examining+society+role/1275699/story.html
(link). 21. Id. Somerville is also troubled by the case of a
sixty-year-old Canadian woman who gave birth to twin boys after traveling to
India to receive IVF treatment using donor eggs and her husband's sperm. Id. 22. See,
e.g., N. Coast Women's Care
Med. Group, Inc. v. San Diego County Superior Court, 189 P.3d 959 (Cal. 2008) (ruling that a California clinic could not
rely on religious objections and refuse to perform an intrauterine insemination
procedure on a lesbian patient) (link). 23. See
Andrea D. Gurmankin et al., Screening Practices and Beliefs of Assisted
Reproductive Technology Programs, 83 Fertility
& Sterility 61, 66 (2005); Judith F. Daar, Accessing Reproductive
Technologies: Invisible Barriers, Indelible Harms, 23 Berkeley J. Gender L. & Just. 18, 54
(2008). 24. Oklahoma, for example, limits the use of
artificial insemination to a husband and a wife. See Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 10, § 553
(West 2007). 25. See
Marsha Garrison, Regulating Reproduction, 76 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 1623, 1631–32 (2008) (describing the
implications of the principle of patient autonomy) (link). 26. Id.
at 1632 (explaining that the FDA has "the authority to deny access to drugs
and medical devices found to be unsafe or ineffective"). 27. Id.
at 1644 ("Some experts estimate that maternal morbidity is seven times
greater in multiple pregnancies than in singleton deliveries and that perinatal
mortality rates are four times higher for twins and six times higher for
triplets and higher-order births."). Men
who intend to become fathers through ART do not face comparable medical risks. 28. Id. 29. Public costs range from health care to education. There is a generally-recognized social obligation to protect children once they come into existence. Of course, the meaning of "come into existence" is highly contested: Louisiana, for example, has adopted legislation recognizing that embryos are "persons," and the proposed legislation in Georgia accords similar status to embryos. See La. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 9:129 (2008) ("A viable in vitro fertilized human ovum is a juridical person . . . .") (link); Saletan, supra note 16. In arguing for the protection of future children, we are not according personhood to embryos; indeed, if all embryos created in an ART procedure are not transferred, embryos may need to be donated to another infertile patient, used for medical research, stored indefinitely, or destroyed. 30. See generally John A. Robertson, Assisting Reproduction, Choosing Genes, and the Scope of Reproductive Freedom, 76 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 1490, 1492 (2008) (arguing that "society is accustomed to think of reproductive autonomy in constitutional terms as primarily a right not to reproduce") (link). 31. For
further discussion, see Cahn, supra note 17;
Naomi Cahn, Accidental Incest: Drawing the Line—or the Curtain?—for
Reproductive Technology, 32 Harv. J.
L. & Gender 59 (2009) (link).
32. See generally Gaia Bernstein, The Socio-Legal Acceptance of New Technologies: A Close Look at Artificial Insemination, 77 Wash. L. Rev. 1035 (2002) (discussing reasons for the lack of oversight); on cultural conflict, see Naomi Cahn & June Carbone, Red Families v. Blue Families (forthcoming 2010). 33. See The Fertility Clinic Success Rate and Certification Act of 1992, 42 U.S.C. § 263a-1 to -7 (2006) (link); 21 C.F.R. § 1271.1 (2008) (link). 34. See Spar, supra note 17, at 34 (observing that "the threat of regulation hangs heavily over the industry, prodding suppliers to conform to a fairly rigorous regime of self-regulation and often to act as if they were anticipating a regulatory response"). 35. See Am. Soc'y Reprod. Med., Ethical
Considerations of Assisted Reproductive Technologies: ASRM Ethics Committee
Reports and Statements, available at
http://www.asrm.org/Media/Ethics/ethicsmain.html (link). On
screening, see Ethics Comm. of Am. Soc'y Reprod. Med., Child-rearing Ability
and the Provision of Fertility Services, 82 Fertility
& Sterility 564 (2004). 36. There
have been several reported cases of embryos that were wrongly implanted in the
wrong woman. See Leslie Bender, "To
Err Is Human": ART Mix-ups: A Labor-Based, Relational Proposal, 9 J. Gender Race & Just. 443, 446–453
(2006). 37. See Rao, supra note 18,
at 1458–59. Indeed, the very title of the
German law makes its intent plain: it is named the "Embryo Protection Act." See id.
at 1458. 38. A
doctor might agree to implant more embryos than recommended because of the
competition between the more than 400 fertility clinics in this country. Stephanie Saul, Birth of Octuplets Puts Focus
on Fertility Clinics, NYTimes.com,
Feb. 11, 2009, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/12/health/12ivf.html?ref=health (link). 39. Ms.
Suleman appears to have used a known donor to create her embryos. There are complex issues involved in
regulating the donor world to assure protection of all involved. See, e.g., Cahn, Accidental Incest, supra note 31;
Naomi Cahn, Necessary Subjects: The Need for a Mandatory National Donor
Gamete Databank, 12 DePaul J. Health
Care L. 203 (2009). 40. See Am. Soc'y Reprod. Med., supra note 14, at S163. 42. Garrison, supra note 25, at 1648. A national transplant network was established in 1984 "to be run by a private, nonprofit entity, that would maintain regional organ banks and set criteria for donation and receipt of organs." Id. at 1648–49. According to Garrison:
Even Garrison acknowledges that the UNOS approach is not perfect, but it seems to be a possible alternative regulatory scheme. 43. Estimates
based on government reports are that less than 20% of fertility clinics comply
with the voluntary guidelines restricting the number of embryos to be
transferred into women under the age of 35.
Stephanie Nano, Few Fertility Clinics Follow Embryo Guidelines, SFGate.com, Feb. 21, 2009,
http://www.sfchronicle.us/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/02/21/MN2A161S2S.DTL
(link).
The guidelines do allow for some flexibility, so this may overstate the
lack of compliance. Doctors also face competitive
pressures to report high success rates. 44. See
U.S. Dep't Health & Human Servs., 2006 Assisted Reproductive Technology
Success Rates 22 (2008), available at
http://www.cdc.gov/ART/ART2006/508PDF/2006ART.pdf (link).
Interestingly, only 1.9% of births involved triplets or higher
orders of multiples, perhaps due to selective reduction. Id. 45. E.g.,
David Orentlicher, Discrimination Out of Dismissiveness: The Example of
Infertility 12 (Apr. 29, 2009) (unpublished manuscript, on file with the
Northwestern University Law Review Colloquy). 46. See
June Carbone & Paige Gottheim, Markets, Subsidies, Regulation, and
Trust: Building Ethical Understandings into the Market for Fertility Services,
9 J. Gender Race & Just. 509,
518 (2006). 47. See
id. at 534 (using Great Britain as an example). 48. See
generally Martha M. Ertman, What's Wrong With a Parenthood Market? A New
and Improved Theory of Commodification, 82 N.C.
L. Rev. 1, 15 (2003) ("The free market aspects of alternative
insemination transactions play a crucial role in making this branch of the
parenthood market particularly beneficial to marginalized groups."). Ertman writes: "I think the private law
nature of alternative inseminations, on balance, furthers human flourishing because
statutory regulations would likely reflect majoritarian bias against single
parents and gay people." Id. at
22. 49. Restrictions
based on financial resources or preexisting family size have recently received
the most attention, but we have also seen calls for restrictions based on age,
marital status, and sexual orientation. See,
e.g., Somerville, supra note 21.
50. Cf. In re Marriage Cases, 183 P.3d 384 (Cal. 2008) (invalidating a law prohibiting same-sex marriage on state constitutional grounds) (link); Kerrigan v. Comm'r of Pub. Health, 957 A.2d 407 (Conn. 2008) (same) (link); Goodridge v. Dept. of Pub. Health, 798 N.E.2d 941 (Mass. 2003) (holding that a law banning same-sex marriage lacked a rational basis) (link). But cf. Hernandez v. Robles, 855 N.E.2d 1 (N.Y. 2006) (upholding a law banning same-sex marriage as having a rational basis) (link). 51. See Somerville, supra note 21. 52. Id. 53. Garrison, supra note 25, at 1629; see also Richard F. Storrow, The Bioethics of Prospective Parenthood: In Pursuit of the Proper Standard for Gatekeeping in Infertility Clinics, 28 Cardozo L. Rev. 2283, 2294–95, 2314 (2007) (suggesting that regulation of reproductive technology might fall between adoption and non-assisted reproduction, and that clinics might use a preliminary screen for fitness, not a more complete best-interest test) (link). We are more wary than Professor Storrow about "fitness" determinations given the dangers (that he recognizes) of the relationship between fitness and eugenics. 54. See Sarah B. Lawsky & Naomi Cahn, Embryo Exchanges and Adoption Tax Credits (George Washington Law Sch. Pub. Law & Legal Theory Working Paper No. 468, 2009), available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=1394046 (link). 55. Juno (Fox Searchlight 2007). 56. We also object to regulations attempting to preclude single, gay, or lesbian individuals and couples from adopting. For a map of existing laws, see National Gay & Lesbian Taskforce, Adoption Laws in the U.S. (2008), available at http://www.thetaskforce.org/reports_and_research/adoption_laws (link). ———— Copyright 2009 Northwestern University Cite as: 103 Nw. U. L. Rev. Colloquy 501 (2009), http://www.law.northwestern.edu/lawreview/colloquy/2009/22/LRColl2009n22Cahn&Collins.pdf. Persistent URL: http://www.law.northwestern.edu/lawreview/colloquy/2009/22 (Comments) |