Sills Eric Scott, Healy Clifford M
Sims International Fertility Clinic, Dublin, Ireland.
Reprod Health. 2008 Nov 4;5:9. doi: 10.1186/1742-4755-5-9.
Surrogacy involves one woman (surrogate mother) carrying a child for another person/s (commissioning person/couple), based on a mutual agreement requiring the child to be handed over to the commissioning person/couple following birth. Reasons for seeking surrogacy include situations where a woman has non-functional or absent reproductive organs, or as a remedy for recurrent pregnancy loss. Additionally, surrogacy may find application in any medical context where pregnancy is contraindicated, or where a couple consisting of two males seek to become parents through oocyte donation. Gestational surrogacy is one of the main issues at the forefront of bioethics and the advanced reproductive technologies, representing an important challenge to medical law. This analysis reviews the history of surrogacy and clinical and legal issues pertaining to this branch of reproductive medicine. Interestingly, the Medical Council of Ireland does not acknowledge surrogacy in its current practice guidelines, nor is there specific legislation addressing surrogacy in Ireland at present. We therefore have developed a contract-based model for surrogacy in which, courts in Ireland may consider when confronted with a surrogacy dispute, and formulated a system to resolve any potential dispute arising from a surrogacy arrangement. While the 2005 report by the Commission on Assisted Human Reproduction (CAHR) is an expert opinion guiding the Oireachtas' development of specific legislation governing assisted human reproduction and surrogacy, our report represents independent scholarship on the contractual elements of surrogacy with particular focus on how Irish courts might decide on surrogacy matters in a modern day Ireland. This joint medico-legal collaborative also reviews the contract for services arrangement between the commissioning person/s and the surrogate, and the extent to which the contract may be enforced.
代孕是指一名女性(代孕母亲)基于一项双方协议,为另一人/另一对人(委托方/委托夫妇)孕育孩子,该协议要求孩子出生后交给委托方/委托夫妇。寻求代孕的原因包括女性生殖器官无功能或缺失的情况,或作为反复流产的一种补救措施。此外,代孕可应用于任何妊娠禁忌的医疗情况,或由两名男性组成的夫妇通过卵子捐赠寻求成为父母的情况。妊娠代孕是生物伦理学和先进生殖技术前沿的主要问题之一,对医学法律构成了重大挑战。本分析回顾了代孕的历史以及与这一生殖医学分支相关的临床和法律问题。有趣的是,爱尔兰医学委员会在其现行实践指南中不承认代孕,而且目前爱尔兰也没有针对代孕的具体立法。因此,我们制定了一种基于合同的代孕模式,爱尔兰法院在面临代孕纠纷时可以考虑该模式,并制定了一个系统来解决代孕安排中可能出现的任何潜在纠纷。虽然辅助人类生殖委员会(CAHR)2005年的报告是一份专家意见,指导爱尔兰议会制定关于辅助人类生殖和代孕的具体立法,但我们的报告代表了关于代孕合同要素的独立学术研究,特别关注爱尔兰法院在现代爱尔兰如何裁决代孕问题。这种医学与法律的联合协作还审查了委托方与代孕者之间的服务合同安排,以及该合同可执行的程度。