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Non-Anonymous Donation Arrangements:
Why Not?
Contemporary psychological wisdom encourages disclosure
of a child's genetic history. The belief being that
everyone has a right to their biological heritage and
that to not disclose will cause undue damage to family
relationships and a child's sense of self. This is a
far cry from prior convention, which was to never tell
because disclosing would jeopardize the family bond
and cause a child to question his sense of belonging.
This lore was past down from the worlds of traditional
adoption and early sperm banking policy. It is within
this context that egg donation programs have emerged
and flourished. ÊÊÊÊ
Egg donation programs initially followed the sperm-banking
model where anonymity and secrecy were the rule. Because
egg donation practices are so much more involved than
sperm donation, the psychological community was reluctantly
invited in to offer assistance in how to best guide
practitioners and potential parents through this complex
reproductive option. ÊÊÊÊ
In time, medical experts accepted psychological thought
whereby secrecy and non-disclosure was not serving the
best interests of the children that were being created
through these means. Educating both the medical and
patient communities about the upside of avoiding family
secrets became the mental health professional's challenge;
however, convincing the medical practitioners has not
been as simple.Ê ÊÊÊÊ
We are faced with a quandary
when we fast-forward to where we are now. The general
consensus is that parents are becoming more comfortable
with disclosing and children have a right to know about
their genetic history. What information should parents
have at their disposal? The burning question remains,
what can parents tell if they have participated in an
anonymous donation arrangement. Whether this is an informational
questionnaire or some photographs, what can they really
say about the woman who so generously offered her eggs.
ÊÊÊÊ
Why is it that the screener, the doctor, the nurses,
and adjunct staff all get to meet the egg donors? But
those that have the greatest emotional investment in
her are kept at bay. It just doesn't make sense. When
a child asks about the donor, what can this parent shareÉ.an
application, a few pictures and the claim that Dr. So
and So thinks well of her. Why are we encouraging anonymous
donations?Ê What purpose do these types of arrangements
serve? The often-quoted reason is to protect patients
and donors. Protect them from what? What is the threat?
My claim is there is no threat and that patients and
donors alike are obliged to fully disclose all pertinent
information to the children they are collectively creating.
ÊÊÊÊ
This responsibility can only be fulfilled by both recipients
and donors actually meeting one another at the outset
and making an informed decision regarding whether they
want to proceed with the process of donation. It also
allows parents to create a warm and sensitive birth
story to share with their children. Recipients have
a responsibility to their child and to themselves to
meet their donor and feel good about the eggs they are
about to embrace. Needless to say, donors also have
an obligation to offer their eggs to people they respect
in an effort to minimize future doubts or regrets about
the individuals they have helped become parents. I have
donors report that meeting their recipients makes their
entire experience more personal and meaningful. In the
same vein recipients report a burden of shame being
lifted from their shoulders when they actually meet
their donor. ÊÊÊÊ
Another, often mentioned, concern reported by agencies
has to do with the egg donor pool drying up and that
there will be a paucity of donors if they were required
to donate non-anonymously. Granted there may be some
donors who would choose not to donate but there are
sure to be others that would welcome the prospect of
meeting their recipient. Perhaps, it might even open
the donation doors and bring in donors that were previously
disturbed by the anonymity policy of many programs.
ÊÊÊÊ
One of the biggest obstacles to non-anonymous arrangements
is shame. It drives patients underground with their
fertility secret causing them to avert facing their
reproductive struggles openly. Because they have failed
to procreate in the traditional sense, they metaphorically
bury their head in the sand toting the adage Òout of
sight out of mindÓ. If the donor is not seen, then she
doesn't really exist. Not a particularly healthy approach
to building a family. ÊÊÊÊ
Yet another misconception regarding open donation is
the belief that anonymity fosters protection. This is
the rhetoric of many donation programs. The claim is
that children will fare better if arrangements are made
anonymously, assuming anonymity will not challenge a
family's legitimacy. It guards against a donor from
intruding and laying claim to the child. Needless to
say, donors don't donate because they want children
nor are they interested in the recipient's child. Open
donation does not threaten a mother's struggle with
entitlement as the authentic parent, in fact, it allows
her to face her perceived nemesis and prevent the family
from forever being haunted by the donor's imagined presence.
ÊÊÊÊ
As mental health professionals, we have an obligation
to our patients and the medical practitioners we work
with and that is to call into question policies of secrecy
and anonymity and help our patients acknowledge their
truths by approaching egg donation with all eyes wide
open. There is not better way to do this than by donor
and recipient looking into one another's eyes exchanging
smiles, sentiments of gratitude, warm feelings as well
as apprehensions. Let's not go along with what many
of us know in our heart of hearts is not in the psychological
best interests of the families we are all helping to
build. If secrecy is unhealthy and disclosure is healthy-then
how in the world does anonymity make sense?
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