And, unsurprisingly, it’s the first case of its kind.
A 59-year-old woman is embroiled in a legal battle to be able to give birth to her grandchild.
If you’re struggling to comprehend that sentence, you’re not alone, the complicated case is the first on record.
The British woman and her husband claim that it was their daughter’s dying wish that her eggs be fertilised with donor sperm and implanted into her mother’s womb. The woman wanted her mother to have the opportunity to become a grandparent, apparently.
The 59 year old’s daughter died in 2011 of bowel cancer, she was in her 20s. Prior to her death, she had her eggs frozen in the hope that one day she would be able to fall pregnant.
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The woman and her husband approached several fertility clinics after their daughter’s death. They hoped that they could create embryos using standard IVF treatment with their daughters eggs and donor sperm.
All of the UK fertility clinics the woman has approached since her daughter’s death are refusing to carry out the procedure.
Now, the mother has had her attempt to export her daughter’s eggs to a New York fertility clinic stopped by the Human Fertility and Embryology Authority (HFEA) because she has no written evidence of her daughter’s consent.
The HFEA have confirmed the daughter did complete a form which gave consent for her eggs to be stored for use after her death, but failed to fill in another crucial form that would have identified how she wanted her eggs to be used. This rendered her consent invalid.
The HFEA committee have further revealed that the “strongest and only evidence” of her consent was a conversation she reportedly had with her mother when she was in hospital the year prior to her death.