The Neiswanger Institute for Bioethics at Loyola University

Imported sperm shortage

The New York Post reported on Sunday that an FDA ban on imported sperm from 30 countries because of concerns about Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease has supplies of Scandinavian sperm at Cryos International's NYC office running low (apparently Cryos is the place to go if you're looking for blond hair and blue eyes). That story prompted a number of follow ups, including this piece on CNN today about a woman who used Danish sperm for her first child and would like to again for her second. Cryos' NYC manager also appeared on NPR's Day to Day earlier this week to criticize the FDA ban. Both the CNN and NPR segments covered the apparent rise in "fertility tourism." In this case, it seems that US woman are heading to Denmark to obtain the sperm now in short supply here in the States.

Two thoughts about all this (maybe people who study reproductive ethics out there will have a few more):
-It would seem the data backs up Cryos' criticism of the FDA ban. A 2006 review paper concluded the chance of vCJD transmission via donated sperm is probably very low.
-This is a topic that people seem totally incapable of talking about without making a joke. The Post gave this story the usual Post treatment. CNN's John Roberts displayed a certain comic fascination. That NPR segment ended in a fit of giggling. And Cryos' ads for US donors feature a statue clad in red and white heart boxers (not to mention "Money! Sex! Karma!). Even a 2006 FDA advisory committee meeting featured jokes by the doctors testifying.

-Greg Dahlmann

contribute a comment

Your contributions to the conversation are very much appreciated. We do have a few simple guidelines, though. Be civil. Stay on topic. We reserve the right to remove comments that violate the aforementioned guidelines. One more thing: comments are moderated, so it may take a little while for your comment to be posted. Thanks.

what is this?

A 'Nature Top 50' science blog by the editors, staff and friends of The American Journal of Bioethics. Science writes: "To follow the latest twists in ... science stories with social impact, dive into this Web log"

The original story behind this blog

What people are saying about blog.bioethics.net

recently on blog.bioethics.net

You Break It, You Buy It

It turns out that the feds have finally decided to stop shelling out dollars to pay for the surgeries that fix the botched one from... (more)

Bargain Basement Genome

Next Big Future says that Applied Biosystems has announced that the $10,000 complete human genome is now in reach, taking less than 2 weeks to... (more)

Clean a Tooth--Save a Baby

Who would have thought there would be a correlation between healthy teeth and healthy babies? Well, it turns out that researchers at Aetna and Columbia... (more)

Wait a Minute Mister Postman....

First, actual anthrax showed up in letters in a mailroom. Now, DHHS says that the treatment for anthrax is doing to be delivered out of... (more)

23andHerBreasts

On Thursday, 23andMe announced their latest initiative aimed at bringing together the largest cohort of women with breast cancer "to build an infrastructure, based on... (more)

this blog's feed

  • Subscribe
    • XML
    • Google Reader or Homepage
    • Add to My Yahoo!
    • Subscribe with Bloglines
    • Subscribe in NewsGator Online
    • Add to My AOL
    • Convert RSS to PDF
    • Add to Technorati Favorites!
    • Add to your phone
    • Get RSS Buttons

info

archives

tags