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Choosing the Sex of Your Baby: A Brief Overview

Embryo Screening Eliminates Rolling of Genetic Dice

By Alan Steinbergs, published Jun 05, 2006
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Despite the current technology flood, it wasn’t long ago that all a mother knew about the baby she was carrying was the fact that she had one in the first place. But as analog methodology gave way to ultrasounds, and ultrasounds to amniocentesis, it became clear that knowing about your baby, even before birth, was becoming not just medically sound, but almost trendy.

Now parents have another choice to make when it comes to knowing about their baby: what sex it should be.

Increasingly, parents around the country are turning to in vitro fertilization (IVF) to ensure the gender of their children. While in vitro fertilization - the process by which a woman’s eggs are fertilized by a man’s sperm in a lab dish - has been around for years, it has traditionally only been used by couples who were infertile.

Now, however, IVF is being used for more than simply having a baby. Would-be parents are using the procedure to find an embryo with the preferred gender in a lab, which is then implanted in the mother.

The process allows parents to precisely and scientifically choose the gender of their baby, though it doesn’t always lead to a successful childbirth. It can also be very expensive, ranging into the tens of thousands of dollars for the procedure alone.

Yet, the price of gender screening doesn’t seem to be fazing many, as a growing number of couples are choosing the procedure to balance their families, choosing to add a boy to a family of girls, or vice versa.

Despite the seemingly noble cause for this procedure, however, gender screening is a controversial topic. Though there is currently no legislation regulating the process, it has been banned in a number of countries, including Canada, France and Great Britain.

Critics of the procedure, called pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (PGD), say that it’s simply another way to control nature, a scenario many compare to “playing God.” But many in the medical community see the procedure, if unfavorably, in a more practical light: they want the procedure used for its original purpose.

Takeaways
  • Embryo screening can be used to check for both gender and disease.
  • Some critics believe gender screening is simply "playing God."
  • Many families use gender screening to create "balanced families."
Comments
Comments 1 - 3 of 3
 
 
i have got a question is it possibble to have twin boys through (PGD) can you answer this email address sherazmalik@supanet.com

Posted on 03/19/2007 at 7:03:00 AM

 
To comment on the surprise thing by the other lady, no I do not want any more surprises! I have had 5 girls in a row and would try any method to bring them a brother. I just feel like it's cheating or it just didn't come naturally, that's the only reason I wouldn't do the ivf otherwise, why not for such a case as mine. I am opting instead for other ways to naturally increase your chances of a boy. We'll see if they work though.

Posted on 03/12/2007 at 6:03:00 AM

 
dont people want a surprise anymore about the sex of their new child? the purpose for ivf was to give children to parents who are infertile, now it seems that it is becoming a trendy thing, like a new fashion trend or something

Posted on 06/21/2006 at 5:06:00 PM

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