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Is It Ethical to Pay Women to Donate Eggs for Medical Research?

New York allows paying women to donate eggs for medical research, raising ethical debates about compensation and exploitation.

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To obtain a steady supply of unfertilized human eggs for medical research, New York's Empire State Stem Cell Board recently authorized paying women to donate their eggs. The decision has set off a new round of discussion about whether paying for eggs is ethical.

The board agreed that women can receive up to $10,000 for donating eggs, a painful and sometimes risky process.... Proponents say compensating women for their eggs is necessary for research, and point out that women who give their eggs for fertility purposes are already paid. Others worry that the practice will commodify the human body and lead to the exploitation of women in financial need [The New York Times].

At the annual meeting of the International Society for Stem Cell Research this week, British researcher Alison Murdoch described a less controversial "egg sharing" program that has met with success.

Women struggling to conceive can obtain IVF ...

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