Britain could risk a sperm donation shortage in the case of a 'no-deal'
Brexit, a government document reveals. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA
GROUP
London
British
couples looking to conceive through artificial insemination face
uncertainty if Britain leaves the European Union without a deal because
sperm would no longer be imported from EU countries under existing
legislation.
Government advice
published on Thursday said Britain imported around 3,000 sperm samples
from a commercial sperm bank in Denmark last year, as well as around
4,000 samples from the United States.
The Cryos sperm bank in Denmark says it is the world's largest.
Sperm
donations in Britain have fallen sharply since donors lost the right to
anonymity under a law that came into force in 2005.
Britain also imports a small number of eggs and embryos from other EU countries, amounting to around 500 last year.
If
Brexit talks collapse, the government said the laws currently governing
sperm imports, the EU Organ Directives and EU Tissues and Cells
Directives, would no longer apply to Britain.
Fertility
banks "would need new written agreements with relevant EU
establishments," the government said, adding that this would "for the
most part be a minimum burden on industry".
"UK
licensed establishments that already hold an import licence to import
tissues and cells from third countries will be able to use their
existing written agreements with third country organisations as a
template," it said.
But Geetha Venkat, director of the Harley Street Fertility Clinic, told BBC radio on Friday that couples were "panicking".
Venkat
said a legislative change on US sperm imports meant these could take up
to three months, while the imports from Denmark currently take only a
week.
Extra paperwork could create additional costs which could be passed on to couples, she warned.
"If
there is Brexit with no deal, we do not know what is going to happen,"
she said, adding: "As it is, it's a stressful treatment, and this is
going to add to that".
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