This document provides a brief history of IVF in Romania, highlighting several key points:
1) The first IVF baby in Romania, Daniel, was born in 1996, making Romania one of the later European countries to have a successful IVF birth.
2) Romania's first IVF clinic was established in 1995 in Timisoara with help from German doctors.
3) IVF development in Romania must be understood in the context of its economy, migration patterns, and role as an egg donation source for other countries like Israel.
4) There are now over 25 IVF clinics in Romania, though reporting of IVF cycle data is voluntary rather than through a national registry. IVF success rates
Only an experienced audio transcription company can ensure accurate transcription and indexing of oral histories to preserve historically valuable interviews.
This document discusses multiplication and provides examples of tricks and methods for solving multiplication problems. It defines multiplication as repeated addition and provides examples like calculating the number of legs on cats to illustrate. It discusses memorizing times tables from 1 to 12 and provides tricks for the 5 times table. Finally, it discusses the lattice method and using the distributive property to multiply larger numbers like 234 x 23 by multiplying digits individually and carrying numbers.
El documento habla sobre la importancia de una buena alimentación basada en frutas para prevenir enfermedades. Propone la creación de un local para ofrecer alternativas saludables a la comida chatarra, contribuyendo así a mejorar la alimentación de la comunidad y su calidad de vida. El objetivo es satisfacer las necesidades de los clientes de una manera balanceada, crear conciencia sobre una vida sana y mejorar el comercio de productos naturales.
Michele Smith is a customer service and sales professional with over 20 years of experience in strategic sales, marketing, customer service, and IT development. She holds a Bachelor's degree from Georgia College & State University. Her experience includes area sales management roles at Icelandic Glacial Bottled Water and several customer service, sales, and account management positions at Bluelinx Corp and Better Brands. She has a proven track record of driving sales growth, developing marketing strategies, managing customer accounts and relationships, and leading teams.
La tecnología se define como el conjunto de conocimientos técnicos y científicos que permiten diseñar y crear bienes y servicios para facilitar la adaptación al medio ambiente y satisfacer las necesidades y deseos de la humanidad.
The document describes training programs focused on customer service excellence offered by Piran Consulting. The 1-day miniclass and 2-day masterclass cover key topics like setting goals, understanding customer needs, generating return business, handling difficult customers, listening skills, and building a sales pipeline. The goal is to provide individuals with tools and concepts to improve customer service, add value to their organization, and enhance their career development.
martin_seybold-letter_of_recommendation David FrasherDavid Frasher
David Frasher was selected as City Manager of Grants Pass, Oregon after an extensive search process. He provided high quality leadership and strengthened standards and ethics in city operations. However, he was terminated after only six months by a new city council majority. This led the community to recall all five council members in an unprecedented action, showing support for David Frasher. The letter writer, a longtime community leader, recommends David Frasher without hesitation for his skills, education, experience, and high ethical standards to lead a city.
Only an experienced audio transcription company can ensure accurate transcription and indexing of oral histories to preserve historically valuable interviews.
This document discusses multiplication and provides examples of tricks and methods for solving multiplication problems. It defines multiplication as repeated addition and provides examples like calculating the number of legs on cats to illustrate. It discusses memorizing times tables from 1 to 12 and provides tricks for the 5 times table. Finally, it discusses the lattice method and using the distributive property to multiply larger numbers like 234 x 23 by multiplying digits individually and carrying numbers.
El documento habla sobre la importancia de una buena alimentación basada en frutas para prevenir enfermedades. Propone la creación de un local para ofrecer alternativas saludables a la comida chatarra, contribuyendo así a mejorar la alimentación de la comunidad y su calidad de vida. El objetivo es satisfacer las necesidades de los clientes de una manera balanceada, crear conciencia sobre una vida sana y mejorar el comercio de productos naturales.
Michele Smith is a customer service and sales professional with over 20 years of experience in strategic sales, marketing, customer service, and IT development. She holds a Bachelor's degree from Georgia College & State University. Her experience includes area sales management roles at Icelandic Glacial Bottled Water and several customer service, sales, and account management positions at Bluelinx Corp and Better Brands. She has a proven track record of driving sales growth, developing marketing strategies, managing customer accounts and relationships, and leading teams.
La tecnología se define como el conjunto de conocimientos técnicos y científicos que permiten diseñar y crear bienes y servicios para facilitar la adaptación al medio ambiente y satisfacer las necesidades y deseos de la humanidad.
The document describes training programs focused on customer service excellence offered by Piran Consulting. The 1-day miniclass and 2-day masterclass cover key topics like setting goals, understanding customer needs, generating return business, handling difficult customers, listening skills, and building a sales pipeline. The goal is to provide individuals with tools and concepts to improve customer service, add value to their organization, and enhance their career development.
martin_seybold-letter_of_recommendation David FrasherDavid Frasher
David Frasher was selected as City Manager of Grants Pass, Oregon after an extensive search process. He provided high quality leadership and strengthened standards and ethics in city operations. However, he was terminated after only six months by a new city council majority. This led the community to recall all five council members in an unprecedented action, showing support for David Frasher. The letter writer, a longtime community leader, recommends David Frasher without hesitation for his skills, education, experience, and high ethical standards to lead a city.
Piran Consulting is a Singapore-based consulting firm focused on human capital development and learning and development solutions. They offer tailored training programs, workshops, and consulting services to both individuals and organizations across various industries. Their services include skills training, leadership development, recruitment training, and strategic consulting. Piran Consulting was established in 2013 and has experience working with clients across Asia Pacific. They take a customized approach and use interactive training methods like simulations and role plays. Feedback from clients praises their engaging workshops and comprehensive programs.
This 1-day masterclass focuses on coaching and mentoring next-generation consultants to develop talent and retain staff. The class will teach managers how to create growth plans matching skills to needs, ask effective questions, provide constructive feedback, and build developmental networks. It will also cover mentoring millennials, aligning coaching with development plans, goal-setting models, and building trust for feedback. Training uses group activities, simulations, and case studies to develop skills for success beyond traditional KPIs. The facilitator has extensive recruiting experience and qualifications in training and development.
La rúbrica digital es una herramienta desarrollada por la Superintendencia de Seguros de la Nación para reemplazar la rúbrica en papel. Ofrece ventajas como eliminar costos de impresión, envío y traslado, y permite gestionar operaciones de forma online. Los productores de seguros podrán cargar datos vía web usando archivos XML o de forma manual, y se validarán los datos antes de emitir un certificado digital que hará las veces de rúbrica.
The document lists various environmental issues caused by pollution including acid rain, endangerment and extinction of species, loss of forests, and global warming. It also lists personal health issues such as anxiety, sleep disturbance, stress, and hearing loss.
This document provides an introduction to intellectual property rights. It discusses the key concepts of property and intellectual property. The seven main types of intellectual property instruments are described as patents, trademarks, geographical indications, industrial designs, integrated circuit layout designs, trade secrets, and copyrights. For each type, the document outlines what is protected, requirements for protection, duration of protection and other key details.
Concept and system design for rate controlled ddsSonam Gandhi
[1] The document discusses concepts and system design for rate-controlled drug delivery systems (DDS). It defines controlled DDS as delivering drugs at predetermined rates locally or systemically for specified periods.
[2] Modes of controlled release are discussed including diffusion-controlled, membrane permeation controlled, and micro reservoir partition controlled systems. Feedback regulated and activation modulated DDS are also summarized.
[3] Various mechanisms for achieving controlled release are covered, including diffusion, swelling, degradation, osmotic pressure, hydrodynamic pressure, and pH or enzyme activation. Rate-programmed and activation modulated DDS are classified and examples provided.
Within one's mind are all the resources needed for successful living. Ideas in our consciousness, when developed and given freedom, can lead to positive outcomes.
This document discusses rate-controlled drug delivery systems. It begins by classifying these systems into four categories: rate pre-programmed, activation modulated, feedback regulated, and site targeting. Rate pre-programmed systems include polymer membrane, polymer matrix, and microreservoir designs. Activation modulated systems use physical, chemical, or biochemical processes to activate drug release, such as osmotic pressure, pH, or enzymes. Feedback regulated systems sense physiological parameters and release drug accordingly. Site targeting systems deliver drugs specifically to certain tissues. The document provides examples like transdermal patches and implants to illustrate these concepts.
The document discusses several key points about anemia:
- Anemia can be caused by decreased red blood cell production (due to deficiencies, marrow failure), or increased red blood cell destruction (hemolytic anemia from autoimmune issues, genetic defects, trauma, parasites).
- Morphologies include microcytic hypochromic cells in iron deficiency anemia, and oval macrocytic cells with hypersegmented neutrophils in megaloblastic anemia.
- Complications include cardiac failure, shortness of breath, irritability, and mood swings.
The Commission on Human Rights (CHR) is designated as the Gender Ombud under the Magna Carta of Women. As Gender Ombud, the CHR has the power to establish guidelines to facilitate women's access to legal remedies and promote their rights. In 2016, the CHR strengthened its internal structures through the Gender Equality and Women's Human Rights Center to effectively carry out its core mandates of protection, promotion, and policy advocacy for women's rights. The transition year between administrations posed challenges like cases of violence and derogatory statements against women. The CHR conducted investigations and issued advisories upholding women's rights. It also held a national inquiry on reproductive health in response to contraceptive bans.
1. MEP Norica Nicolai hosted a debate on infertility policy in the EU after a report revealed numerous barriers to access infertility services across EU nations.
2. The report, supported by Merck and produced by Fertility Europe and ESHRE, presented a comparative account of infertility policies in 9 EU states and calls for urgent action to address health inequalities.
3. Nicolai and infertility advocacy groups recommend 5 actions: prioritizing infertility on public health agendas; including fertility in demographic plans; promoting gender equality; allowing workplace flexibility for treatment; and updating the EU's comparative analysis of assisted reproduction policies.
The document summarizes a policy audit launch event on fertility held in the European Parliament. It discusses the challenges of infertility in Europe, including unequal access to treatment across EU countries. Presenters highlighted issues like long wait times, high costs, and discrimination faced. They called for increased awareness, standardized eligibility criteria, research funding, and ensuring infertility is seen as a medical issue rather than a lifestyle choice. The first IVF baby addressed the event, urging support for those unable to conceive naturally. National representatives from Romania and Italy discussed the specific issues in their countries. Overall the event aimed to start a dialogue on supporting equal access to fertility treatments and policies across the EU.
The document summarizes a policy audit launch event on fertility held in the European Parliament. It discusses the challenges of infertility in Europe, including unequal access to treatment across EU countries. Presentations were given highlighting issues like long wait times, high costs, and discrimination faced. There were calls to improve coordination between countries and promote universal access to safe, effective fertility treatments for all. The need to reduce stigma and support those undergoing treatment was also emphasized.
Berer manila presentation abortion in the criminal law 23 january 2014Lisa Hallgarten
The document summarizes a report on the criminalization of abortion in 24 countries. It finds that health professionals frequently report women who experience complications from unsafe abortion to the police. Women are then detained, prosecuted, and sometimes imprisoned. The report also describes how anti-abortion activists entrap abortion providers through false investigations. Overall, it concludes that the active criminalization of abortion violates women's rights and deters access to even legal abortion care.
Abortion in the criminal law Marge Berer presentation 23 january 2014Lisa Hallgarten
There are few countries in the world where abortion isn't regulated by the criminal law. As a result doctors and women can be prosecuted for providing or having an abortion that is considered illegal. In this presentation, Marge Berer introduces a report which finds that all over the world women are in prison because they have had, or are suspected of having an illegal abortion. This is information that has not been captured before, and what has been shocking for many readers has been the role that health care professionals themselves have played in the arrest and prosecution of women who have sought medical help from them.
This document provides a summary of a policy audit report on fertility that analyzed policies in 9 EU countries. It finds that over 25 million EU citizens are affected by infertility, though rates of infertility are difficult to compare across countries due to different data methodologies. Fertility rates in the 9 countries range from 1.32 in Spain and Poland to 2.01 in France. The report includes country profiles of fertility policies, diagnosis and treatment availability, funding, and awareness efforts in each of the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Romania, Spain, Sweden, and the UK.
This document is a policy audit report on fertility that analyzes fertility policies and treatment landscapes in 9 EU countries: Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Romania, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. The report finds that while infertility affects over 25 million EU citizens, there is significant variation among the countries in terms of legislation, available treatments, eligibility criteria, and public funding/reimbursement for fertility treatments. Key issues addressed include limited health literacy and education on infertility, stigma surrounding the topic, and demographic challenges facing EU countries as total fertility rates remain below replacement levels in all nations examined. The report aims to further discussion on supporting policies that address these issues and facilitate progress for EU citizens dealing with infertility.
This document discusses fertility issues in Europe. It notes that approximately 25 million EU citizens experience fertility problems. Medically assisted reproduction (MAR) treatments have increased substantially in Europe over the past decade, with over 400,000 MAR cycles performed in 2005. One in six people experience fertility problems during their reproductive years. The causes of infertility can be due to physiological factors in men, women or both, and in some cases no cause is identified.
This document discusses fertility issues in Europe. It notes that approximately 25 million EU citizens experience fertility problems. Medically assisted reproduction (MAR) treatments have increased substantially in Europe over the past decade, with over 400,000 cycles performed in 2005. One in six people experience fertility issues during their reproductive years. The causes of infertility can be due to physiological factors in the man, woman or both, or remain unexplained in some cases. Fertility Europe advocates for improved rights and access to treatment for those struggling with fertility.
This document discusses fertility issues in Europe. It notes that approximately 25 million EU citizens experience fertility problems. Medically assisted reproduction (MAR) treatments have increased substantially in Europe over the past decade, with over 400,000 MAR cycles performed in 2005. One in six people experience fertility issues during their reproductive years. The causes of infertility can include physiological factors in men (20-30% of cases), physiological factors in women (20-35% of cases), or joint problems of both (25-40% of cases). Fertility Europe represents those affected by fertility issues across 22 European countries.
This document discusses egg donation in Cyprus and the associated issues. It provides background on egg donation procedures and risks. Cyprus has become a hub for fertility tourism due to low costs, short wait times, and a large number of willing egg donors, many of whom are lower-income immigrants. However, the industry lacks regulation, raising health and ethical concerns. Donors may feel pressured and not fully understand risks. The document recommends improving regulation and transparency to better protect donors and minimize health inequalities between recipients and donors.
Piran Consulting is a Singapore-based consulting firm focused on human capital development and learning and development solutions. They offer tailored training programs, workshops, and consulting services to both individuals and organizations across various industries. Their services include skills training, leadership development, recruitment training, and strategic consulting. Piran Consulting was established in 2013 and has experience working with clients across Asia Pacific. They take a customized approach and use interactive training methods like simulations and role plays. Feedback from clients praises their engaging workshops and comprehensive programs.
This 1-day masterclass focuses on coaching and mentoring next-generation consultants to develop talent and retain staff. The class will teach managers how to create growth plans matching skills to needs, ask effective questions, provide constructive feedback, and build developmental networks. It will also cover mentoring millennials, aligning coaching with development plans, goal-setting models, and building trust for feedback. Training uses group activities, simulations, and case studies to develop skills for success beyond traditional KPIs. The facilitator has extensive recruiting experience and qualifications in training and development.
La rúbrica digital es una herramienta desarrollada por la Superintendencia de Seguros de la Nación para reemplazar la rúbrica en papel. Ofrece ventajas como eliminar costos de impresión, envío y traslado, y permite gestionar operaciones de forma online. Los productores de seguros podrán cargar datos vía web usando archivos XML o de forma manual, y se validarán los datos antes de emitir un certificado digital que hará las veces de rúbrica.
The document lists various environmental issues caused by pollution including acid rain, endangerment and extinction of species, loss of forests, and global warming. It also lists personal health issues such as anxiety, sleep disturbance, stress, and hearing loss.
This document provides an introduction to intellectual property rights. It discusses the key concepts of property and intellectual property. The seven main types of intellectual property instruments are described as patents, trademarks, geographical indications, industrial designs, integrated circuit layout designs, trade secrets, and copyrights. For each type, the document outlines what is protected, requirements for protection, duration of protection and other key details.
Concept and system design for rate controlled ddsSonam Gandhi
[1] The document discusses concepts and system design for rate-controlled drug delivery systems (DDS). It defines controlled DDS as delivering drugs at predetermined rates locally or systemically for specified periods.
[2] Modes of controlled release are discussed including diffusion-controlled, membrane permeation controlled, and micro reservoir partition controlled systems. Feedback regulated and activation modulated DDS are also summarized.
[3] Various mechanisms for achieving controlled release are covered, including diffusion, swelling, degradation, osmotic pressure, hydrodynamic pressure, and pH or enzyme activation. Rate-programmed and activation modulated DDS are classified and examples provided.
Within one's mind are all the resources needed for successful living. Ideas in our consciousness, when developed and given freedom, can lead to positive outcomes.
This document discusses rate-controlled drug delivery systems. It begins by classifying these systems into four categories: rate pre-programmed, activation modulated, feedback regulated, and site targeting. Rate pre-programmed systems include polymer membrane, polymer matrix, and microreservoir designs. Activation modulated systems use physical, chemical, or biochemical processes to activate drug release, such as osmotic pressure, pH, or enzymes. Feedback regulated systems sense physiological parameters and release drug accordingly. Site targeting systems deliver drugs specifically to certain tissues. The document provides examples like transdermal patches and implants to illustrate these concepts.
The document discusses several key points about anemia:
- Anemia can be caused by decreased red blood cell production (due to deficiencies, marrow failure), or increased red blood cell destruction (hemolytic anemia from autoimmune issues, genetic defects, trauma, parasites).
- Morphologies include microcytic hypochromic cells in iron deficiency anemia, and oval macrocytic cells with hypersegmented neutrophils in megaloblastic anemia.
- Complications include cardiac failure, shortness of breath, irritability, and mood swings.
The Commission on Human Rights (CHR) is designated as the Gender Ombud under the Magna Carta of Women. As Gender Ombud, the CHR has the power to establish guidelines to facilitate women's access to legal remedies and promote their rights. In 2016, the CHR strengthened its internal structures through the Gender Equality and Women's Human Rights Center to effectively carry out its core mandates of protection, promotion, and policy advocacy for women's rights. The transition year between administrations posed challenges like cases of violence and derogatory statements against women. The CHR conducted investigations and issued advisories upholding women's rights. It also held a national inquiry on reproductive health in response to contraceptive bans.
1. MEP Norica Nicolai hosted a debate on infertility policy in the EU after a report revealed numerous barriers to access infertility services across EU nations.
2. The report, supported by Merck and produced by Fertility Europe and ESHRE, presented a comparative account of infertility policies in 9 EU states and calls for urgent action to address health inequalities.
3. Nicolai and infertility advocacy groups recommend 5 actions: prioritizing infertility on public health agendas; including fertility in demographic plans; promoting gender equality; allowing workplace flexibility for treatment; and updating the EU's comparative analysis of assisted reproduction policies.
The document summarizes a policy audit launch event on fertility held in the European Parliament. It discusses the challenges of infertility in Europe, including unequal access to treatment across EU countries. Presenters highlighted issues like long wait times, high costs, and discrimination faced. They called for increased awareness, standardized eligibility criteria, research funding, and ensuring infertility is seen as a medical issue rather than a lifestyle choice. The first IVF baby addressed the event, urging support for those unable to conceive naturally. National representatives from Romania and Italy discussed the specific issues in their countries. Overall the event aimed to start a dialogue on supporting equal access to fertility treatments and policies across the EU.
The document summarizes a policy audit launch event on fertility held in the European Parliament. It discusses the challenges of infertility in Europe, including unequal access to treatment across EU countries. Presentations were given highlighting issues like long wait times, high costs, and discrimination faced. There were calls to improve coordination between countries and promote universal access to safe, effective fertility treatments for all. The need to reduce stigma and support those undergoing treatment was also emphasized.
Berer manila presentation abortion in the criminal law 23 january 2014Lisa Hallgarten
The document summarizes a report on the criminalization of abortion in 24 countries. It finds that health professionals frequently report women who experience complications from unsafe abortion to the police. Women are then detained, prosecuted, and sometimes imprisoned. The report also describes how anti-abortion activists entrap abortion providers through false investigations. Overall, it concludes that the active criminalization of abortion violates women's rights and deters access to even legal abortion care.
Abortion in the criminal law Marge Berer presentation 23 january 2014Lisa Hallgarten
There are few countries in the world where abortion isn't regulated by the criminal law. As a result doctors and women can be prosecuted for providing or having an abortion that is considered illegal. In this presentation, Marge Berer introduces a report which finds that all over the world women are in prison because they have had, or are suspected of having an illegal abortion. This is information that has not been captured before, and what has been shocking for many readers has been the role that health care professionals themselves have played in the arrest and prosecution of women who have sought medical help from them.
This document provides a summary of a policy audit report on fertility that analyzed policies in 9 EU countries. It finds that over 25 million EU citizens are affected by infertility, though rates of infertility are difficult to compare across countries due to different data methodologies. Fertility rates in the 9 countries range from 1.32 in Spain and Poland to 2.01 in France. The report includes country profiles of fertility policies, diagnosis and treatment availability, funding, and awareness efforts in each of the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Romania, Spain, Sweden, and the UK.
This document is a policy audit report on fertility that analyzes fertility policies and treatment landscapes in 9 EU countries: Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Romania, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. The report finds that while infertility affects over 25 million EU citizens, there is significant variation among the countries in terms of legislation, available treatments, eligibility criteria, and public funding/reimbursement for fertility treatments. Key issues addressed include limited health literacy and education on infertility, stigma surrounding the topic, and demographic challenges facing EU countries as total fertility rates remain below replacement levels in all nations examined. The report aims to further discussion on supporting policies that address these issues and facilitate progress for EU citizens dealing with infertility.
This document discusses fertility issues in Europe. It notes that approximately 25 million EU citizens experience fertility problems. Medically assisted reproduction (MAR) treatments have increased substantially in Europe over the past decade, with over 400,000 MAR cycles performed in 2005. One in six people experience fertility problems during their reproductive years. The causes of infertility can be due to physiological factors in men, women or both, and in some cases no cause is identified.
This document discusses fertility issues in Europe. It notes that approximately 25 million EU citizens experience fertility problems. Medically assisted reproduction (MAR) treatments have increased substantially in Europe over the past decade, with over 400,000 cycles performed in 2005. One in six people experience fertility issues during their reproductive years. The causes of infertility can be due to physiological factors in the man, woman or both, or remain unexplained in some cases. Fertility Europe advocates for improved rights and access to treatment for those struggling with fertility.
This document discusses fertility issues in Europe. It notes that approximately 25 million EU citizens experience fertility problems. Medically assisted reproduction (MAR) treatments have increased substantially in Europe over the past decade, with over 400,000 MAR cycles performed in 2005. One in six people experience fertility issues during their reproductive years. The causes of infertility can include physiological factors in men (20-30% of cases), physiological factors in women (20-35% of cases), or joint problems of both (25-40% of cases). Fertility Europe represents those affected by fertility issues across 22 European countries.
This document discusses egg donation in Cyprus and the associated issues. It provides background on egg donation procedures and risks. Cyprus has become a hub for fertility tourism due to low costs, short wait times, and a large number of willing egg donors, many of whom are lower-income immigrants. However, the industry lacks regulation, raising health and ethical concerns. Donors may feel pressured and not fully understand risks. The document recommends improving regulation and transparency to better protect donors and minimize health inequalities between recipients and donors.
Berer belfast presentation abortion internationally 14 february 2014Lisa Hallgarten
This document discusses abortion internationally, including its history, current laws and policies, services provided, and how the abortion pill is changing practices. Some key points:
- Abortion has long been part of controlling fertility and reproductive rights. Most countries have had abortion restrictions in criminal law since the 19th century.
- Where abortion is legalized, deaths are very low, making it one of the safest medical procedures. However, unsafe abortions still cause many deaths globally each year.
- There is a trend toward more liberal abortion laws and making it a normal part of women's healthcare. The abortion pill is changing practices by allowing earlier abortions outside hospitals and putting the process more in women's control.
The main purpose of this research was to investigate the women pregnancy healthy status and behaviors in Eastern-Azerbaijan province referred to the treatment health centers in 2012. The present study was a cross-section study. So 30
married women between 15-49 years old have been taken up randomly for family adjustment and mother health and pregnancy care. A questionnaire including the demographic features and other questions about the status and behavior of the
pregnancy health affairs were used to collect the results. The obtained data of these questionnaires were analyzed by SPSS software. The results that showed 63.8% had itching or the vaginal stimuli and 34.9% (52 ones) had bad-smelling secretions and
36.9% (55 ones) had intense pain around the abdominal area. The investigation of these infectious diseases through sexual path showed that about 0.5% (3 ones) are challenging with these mentioned disorders. The results of the barrenness showed that about 8.7% (52 ones) tried to get pregnant but they did not get pregnant.
The document provides an overview of double gamete and embryo donation procedures in 23 European countries based on information collected by the author. Key points include:
- Double gamete donation and embryo donation are permitted in 13 countries, forbidden in 3, and their status varies in the remaining countries.
- In France, embryo donation is regulated but double gamete donation is forbidden. Embryo donation requires consent from donors and is free, anonymous.
- Romania has no legislation regulating assisted reproduction techniques. Double donation procedures cannot be performed legally and patients seek care abroad.
- Interviews with 24 women who underwent double donation found most had success on the first attempt, and that lack of genetic
Moving from the second wave feminist pro-choice narrative to a grassroots alliance of human rights organization working towards an encompasing healthcare movement that centers healthy reproductive choices.
Abortion As A Human Rights International And Regional StandardsMiranda Anderson
This document summarizes developments in international and regional human rights law supporting women's right to abortion. It discusses how treaty monitoring bodies have interpreted human rights treaties to protect women's right to safe and legal abortion. It also discusses the African Women's Protocol, the only legally binding instrument that explicitly protects abortion as a human right. Finally, it discusses a recent landmark decision by the Council of Europe recognizing access to abortion as a human right.
189Estimates of Female Genital MutilationCutting in 27.docxjoyjonna282
This study estimates the total number of girls and women aged 15 and older who have undergone female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) in 27 African countries and Yemen. The study draws on national survey data on FGM/C prevalence among females aged 15-49 from each country. Estimates of prevalence among older women are made based on trends among younger cohorts. The study finds that approximately 87 million girls and women aged 15 and older have undergone FGM/C across the 28 countries. Providing reliable figures on the scope of those affected allows for better understanding of the practice and mobilization of resources to advocate against it.
How Cambodian Sex Workers Helped Change the Rules for Community EngagementMeg Egan Auderset
The events in Cambodia in 2004 shocked HIV researchers and mobilized advocates. A clinical trial of tenofovir PrEP was halted after protests from Cambodian sex workers' organization WNU. This highlighted the need for systematic guidelines on community engagement in clinical trials. In response, UNAIDS and AVAC collaborated to develop the Good Participatory Practice (GPP) guidelines for biomedical HIV prevention trials. The GPP guidelines provide a framework for stakeholder engagement at every stage of clinical trial development and have since been adapted for other areas. Adherence to these guidelines has improved community engagement in trials like MTN-017, a rectal microbicide trial. However, challenges remain as the types of research broaden.
Nepal has a high maternal mortality rate, over half of which is due to unsafe abortions. Abortion is illegal in all circumstances. Thousands of illegal abortions are performed each year. Research by CREHPA found high rates of abortion complications, lack of awareness about health risks, and inadequate facilities to treat complications. CREHPA launched a public education and advocacy program to increase awareness of health risks and discourage unsafe abortions through various media and by engaging with the Ministry of Health and other stakeholders.
The SOS Infertility Association in Romania was founded in 2008 by women struggling with infertility and has since implemented numerous projects to support infertile couples and increase awareness of infertility issues. These projects include advocating for national and local IVF funding programs, offering free IVF procedures through their "A Chance for Life" project, publishing educational materials like a magazine and podcast, providing financial grants for IVF, organizing an annual awareness week, traveling exhibitions, support groups, online communities, and participating in numerous media appearances to destigmatize infertility. After over a decade of work, the Association has changed realities for infertility in Romania.
The document summarizes a fertility education magazine in Romania called "What do you know about YOUR FERTILITY?". It is a non-profit project run by the SOS Infertilitatea Association. The magazine contains educational articles on fertility topics and testimonials. It aims to provide couples information as they start their conception journey or deal with fertility issues. The magazine has a print run of 5,000 copies and is distributed for free throughout Romania.
This document introduces a new fertility education magazine in Romania published by the non-profit SOS Infertilitatea Association. The magazine aims to provide educational information about fertility to women aged 18-38 and their partners. It will contain articles about fertility topics, testimonials, and interviews in its 60 pages. The magazine will be freely distributed in hospitals, clinics, and doctors' offices to reach its target audience and provide correct information about fertility.
This document discusses ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome (OHSS) based on data from 28 patients in Romania. It finds that most patients were not properly informed of OHSS risks prior to starting fertility treatments. Nearly half of patients reported not receiving adequate support from their clinics after developing OHSS symptoms. As a result, over 30% of patients who did not get pregnant decided to give up on further fertility treatments due to their traumatic OHSS experiences. The document concludes that while preventing OHSS is important, clinics must also ensure patients are well-informed of risks, can recognize symptoms early, and will receive support if OHSS develops.
This very short document is unintelligible as it only contains repeated gibberish text that does not form words or convey any meaning. It provides no information that can be summarized due to the lack of coherent content.
More from Asociatia SOS Infertilitatea - www.vremcopii.ro (20)
Hiranandani Hospital in Powai, Mumbai, is a premier healthcare institution that has been serving the community with exceptional medical care since its establishment. As a part of the renowned Hiranandani Group, the hospital is committed to delivering world-class healthcare services across a wide range of specialties, including kidney transplantation. With its state-of-the-art facilities, advanced medical technology, and a team of highly skilled healthcare professionals, Hiranandani Hospital has earned a reputation as a trusted name in the healthcare industry. The hospital's patient-centric approach, coupled with its focus on innovation and excellence, ensures that patients receive the highest standard of care in a compassionate and supportive environment.
Integrating Ayurveda into Parkinson’s Management: A Holistic ApproachAyurveda ForAll
Explore the benefits of combining Ayurveda with conventional Parkinson's treatments. Learn how a holistic approach can manage symptoms, enhance well-being, and balance body energies. Discover the steps to safely integrate Ayurvedic practices into your Parkinson’s care plan, including expert guidance on diet, herbal remedies, and lifestyle modifications.
Rasamanikya is a excellent preparation in the field of Rasashastra, it is used in various Kushtha Roga, Shwasa, Vicharchika, Bhagandara, Vatarakta, and Phiranga Roga. In this article Preparation& Comparative analytical profile for both Formulationon i.e Rasamanikya prepared by Kushmanda swarasa & Churnodhaka Shodita Haratala. The study aims to provide insights into the comparative efficacy and analytical aspects of these formulations for enhanced therapeutic outcomes.
Travel vaccination in Manchester offers comprehensive immunization services for individuals planning international trips. Expert healthcare providers administer vaccines tailored to your destination, ensuring you stay protected against various diseases. Conveniently located clinics and flexible appointment options make it easy to get the necessary shots before your journey. Stay healthy and travel with confidence by getting vaccinated in Manchester. Visit us: www.nxhealthcare.co.uk
These lecture slides, by Dr Sidra Arshad, offer a quick overview of the physiological basis of a normal electrocardiogram.
Learning objectives:
1. Define an electrocardiogram (ECG) and electrocardiography
2. Describe how dipoles generated by the heart produce the waveforms of the ECG
3. Describe the components of a normal electrocardiogram of a typical bipolar lead (limb II)
4. Differentiate between intervals and segments
5. Enlist some common indications for obtaining an ECG
6. Describe the flow of current around the heart during the cardiac cycle
7. Discuss the placement and polarity of the leads of electrocardiograph
8. Describe the normal electrocardiograms recorded from the limb leads and explain the physiological basis of the different records that are obtained
9. Define mean electrical vector (axis) of the heart and give the normal range
10. Define the mean QRS vector
11. Describe the axes of leads (hexagonal reference system)
12. Comprehend the vectorial analysis of the normal ECG
13. Determine the mean electrical axis of the ventricular QRS and appreciate the mean axis deviation
14. Explain the concepts of current of injury, J point, and their significance
Study Resources:
1. Chapter 11, Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, 14th edition
2. Chapter 9, Human Physiology - From Cells to Systems, Lauralee Sherwood, 9th edition
3. Chapter 29, Ganong’s Review of Medical Physiology, 26th edition
4. Electrocardiogram, StatPearls - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK549803/
5. ECG in Medical Practice by ABM Abdullah, 4th edition
6. Chapter 3, Cardiology Explained, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK2214/
7. ECG Basics, http://www.nataliescasebook.com/tag/e-c-g-basics
Does Over-Masturbation Contribute to Chronic Prostatitis.pptxwalterHu5
In some case, your chronic prostatitis may be related to over-masturbation. Generally, natural medicine Diuretic and Anti-inflammatory Pill can help mee get a cure.
Cell Therapy Expansion and Challenges in Autoimmune DiseaseHealth Advances
There is increasing confidence that cell therapies will soon play a role in the treatment of autoimmune disorders, but the extent of this impact remains to be seen. Early readouts on autologous CAR-Ts in lupus are encouraging, but manufacturing and cost limitations are likely to restrict access to highly refractory patients. Allogeneic CAR-Ts have the potential to broaden access to earlier lines of treatment due to their inherent cost benefits, however they will need to demonstrate comparable or improved efficacy to established modalities.
In addition to infrastructure and capacity constraints, CAR-Ts face a very different risk-benefit dynamic in autoimmune compared to oncology, highlighting the need for tolerable therapies with low adverse event risk. CAR-NK and Treg-based therapies are also being developed in certain autoimmune disorders and may demonstrate favorable safety profiles. Several novel non-cell therapies such as bispecific antibodies, nanobodies, and RNAi drugs, may also offer future alternative competitive solutions with variable value propositions.
Widespread adoption of cell therapies will not only require strong efficacy and safety data, but also adapted pricing and access strategies. At oncology-based price points, CAR-Ts are unlikely to achieve broad market access in autoimmune disorders, with eligible patient populations that are potentially orders of magnitude greater than the number of currently addressable cancer patients. Developers have made strides towards reducing cell therapy COGS while improving manufacturing efficiency, but payors will inevitably restrict access until more sustainable pricing is achieved.
Despite these headwinds, industry leaders and investors remain confident that cell therapies are poised to address significant unmet need in patients suffering from autoimmune disorders. However, the extent of this impact on the treatment landscape remains to be seen, as the industry rapidly approaches an inflection point.
Histololgy of Female Reproductive System.pptxAyeshaZaid1
Dive into an in-depth exploration of the histological structure of female reproductive system with this comprehensive lecture. Presented by Dr. Ayesha Irfan, Assistant Professor of Anatomy, this presentation covers the Gross anatomy and functional histology of the female reproductive organs. Ideal for students, educators, and anyone interested in medical science, this lecture provides clear explanations, detailed diagrams, and valuable insights into female reproductive system. Enhance your knowledge and understanding of this essential aspect of human biology.
share - Lions, tigers, AI and health misinformation, oh my!.pptxTina Purnat
• Pitfalls and pivots needed to use AI effectively in public health
• Evidence-based strategies to address health misinformation effectively
• Building trust with communities online and offline
• Equipping health professionals to address questions, concerns and health misinformation
• Assessing risk and mitigating harm from adverse health narratives in communities, health workforce and health system
1. ÔØ Å ÒÙ× Ö ÔØ
Romanian IVF: A brief history through the ‘lens’ of labour, migration and
global egg donation markets
Michal Rachel Nahman
PII: S2405-6618(16)30011-9
DOI: doi: 10.1016/j.rbms.2016.06.001
Reference: RBMS 22
To appear in: Reproductive Biomedicine & Society Online
Received date: 24 December 2015
Revised date: 6 April 2016
Accepted date: 8 June 2016
Please cite this article as: Nahman, Michal Rachel, Romanian IVF: A brief history
through the ‘lens’ of labour, migration and global egg donation markets, Reproductive
Biomedicine & Society Online (2016), doi: 10.1016/j.rbms.2016.06.001
This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication.
As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript.
The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof
before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process
errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that
apply to the journal pertain.
2. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
Short title: Romanian IVF history
Romanian IVF: a brief history through the
‘ l ens’ of labour, migration and global egg
donation markets
Michal Rachel Nahman
University of the West of England, Frenchay Campus, Coldharbour Lane, Bristol BS16
1QY, UK
E-mail address: michal.nahman@uwe.ac.uk
Abstract
This paper centres on a history of Romanian IVF, including the achievement of
significant milestones and the establishment of key clinics. In addition to examining
some of the legal and ethical aspects of IVF in Romania, the paper also details some
important elements of IVF in neighbouring countries, providing a perspective on
regional similarities and differences. Romania’s neighbours with similar economies and
national-religious contexts have very different IVF pasts and presents. This highlights
the importance of migration and cross-border egg donation in understanding IVF in
Romania. After providing an analysis of Romania’s economy and migration, the paper
examines Romania’s egg donation history, arguing that it has a so-called ‘extractive
reproductive economy’.
Keywords: assisted reproductive techniques, cross-border reproduction, egg donation, Israel, IVF
history, Romania
Introduction
On 6 February 1996, Daniel, the first IVF baby in Romania, was born. This was nearly 20
years after the birth of the world’s first IVF baby, Louise Brown, born in the UK in 1978.
At that moment, Romania became the 18th country in the world to have a successful IVF
birth (Ioan and Astarastoaea, 2008). Leading up to this event, between 1993 and 1995,
Dr Ioan Munteanu had established a centre for laparoscopy, laparoscopic surgery, IVF
and embryo transfer in the city of Timisoara, Romania. He opened the first Romanian
IVF clinic on 20 May 1995. This was achieved with the help of the German Red Cross, led
by Dr D Theatho at the Obstetric and Gynaecology Clinic of ‘Bega’ University (Firuleasa
et al., 2010).
Given Romania’s history of repressive reproductive policies, including both the
promotion of eugenics in the 1930s (Turda, 2009) and Ceausescu’s anti-abortion law
(Kligman, 1998), it is not surprising that it was one of the latecomers to IVF in Europe.
Yet, this paper contends that to comprehend IVF in the Romanian context one must
3. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
examine the interplay in the country between IVF, migration, economics and egg
donation.
The paper centres on a history of Romanian IVF, including the achievement of significant
milestones and the establishment of key clinics. In addition to examining some of the
legal and ethical aspects of IVF in Romania, the paper also details some important
elements of IVF in neighbouring countries, providing a perspective on regional
similarities and differences. Romania’s neighbours with similar economies and national-
religious contexts have very different IVF pasts and presents. This highlights the
importance of considering migration and cross-border egg donation in understanding
IVF in Romania. After providing an analysis of Romania’s economy and migration, the
paper examines Romania’s egg donation history, arguing that it has a so-called
‘extractive reproductive economy’ (Nahman, 2013).
Methodology
This paper is based on an anthropological study that traced and tracked the practices
and discourses surrounding cross-border assisted reproductive technologies
(specifically egg donation) in Israel and Romania beginning in 2002. In that year the
ethnographic research conducted included in-depth qualitative interviews with 50 IVF
patients in Israel and 21 egg donors in Romania (Nahman, 2005, 2006, 2008a, 2011a,
2011b, 2013) and extensive anthropological observation in IVF clinics in those two
countries. Since then, I have been conducting media analysis of the practices in those
countries as well as tracking and analysing legal changes and ethical debates there.
Fertility in Romania
Since 1990 and the end of the Ceausescu era, there has been an increase in the number
of families with only one child in Romania and a steady decline in the birth rate. Whilst
on the one hand more women are deciding to have children, the preference has been for
smaller families, although there is a rural–urban divide, with rural women tending to
have larger families. Indeed, the number of women choosing to remain child-free has
increased among women born after 1960 (Muresan et al., 2008). Furthermore, many
women are choosing to postpone childbearing.
Contraceptive use is increasing in Romania. In 1993 it was at 43%, in 1999 it was 48%
and in 2004 it was 58% (Muresan et al., 2008). Despite this increase in the use of
modern contraceptive methods, abortion rates remain quite high – Romania has one of
the highest rates in Europe (Philipov and Dorbritz, 2003). Abortion is regulated in
Romania under the 2014 Penal Code, which permits abortion before 14 weeks, with the
woman’s consent, and with a licensed practitioner. In some cases, when it is for the
benefit of the woman and foetus, abortion is permitted up to 24 weeks. Furthermore,
self-induced abortions are not considered punishable acts.
Meanwhile, anti-abortion politics in Romania is on the rise, primarily spearheaded by
ProVita, an organization formed in late 1990 under the stated aim of protecting the life
of the unborn child and motivated by Christian Orthodox religious values. In 2011,
4. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
ProVita organized a series of country-wide coordinated marches against abortion and
commented on its success online:
The March for Life took place in over 20 cities in Romania on Saturday, March 24. It is
becoming one of the most important events in Romania, where ideas for life are
reflected in the street. The event of this year expanded nationwide. Largely, the
organizers were pro-vita/pro-life associations and representatives of churches and
denominations in Romania. The organizers of the March launched a Manifesto, in which
they demanded legislation for life and family in Romania.
Among the participants there were representatives of all generations, mainly young
people.
A novelty is the way the March was perceived by the media, unlike last year. The news
was rich, interspersed with many positive comments on life, and in some cases, the
event was particularly debated among the important issues of the day.
It is an expanding event and had echoes in many important institutions such as
Parliament, City Councils. Representatives of these important state institutions were
primarily concerned about declining birth rates and poor health of women in Romania,
due to abortion (http://provita.ro/en/new-details.php?id=1; accessed 30 March 2016)
Such endeavours by pro-life groups do not go unchallenged. The Romanian feminist
movement is engaged in supporting access to safe abortions for all women. Romanian
feminists are also engaged in cross-national anti-abortion politics. On 17 January 2014,
Romanian feminists in Bucharest protested in front of the Spanish embassy in solidarity
with Spanish women who were facing a ban on abortion. Over 200 signatures were
collected on a petition in under 24 hours.
The sense that Romanian women are choosing not to reproduce raises the question of
why they are making this choice. This paper attempts to provide some answers by
looking at economic and migration issues in the country. But first, we turn to the topic of
IVF.
Romanian clinics and rates of IVF
In 2012, there were 26 assisted reproduction clinics in Romania, offering wide-ranging
services (Bretonniere, 2013). Of these, it is known that 13 are dedicated IVF clinics and
seven offer fertility treatments, among which IVF may be offered. The total number of
clinics has increased from 15 to 26 since Ferraretti et al. (2013) published results of a
cross-European study of IVF with data drawn from European registers in 2009, from
which much of the data below are taken. It is possible to access ICSI, sperm and egg
donation, egg freezing and other services at these clinics. At least one of the clinics is
owned by a Greek company, providing them with a clinic based in Romania.
In many of the 34 countries included in the study by Ferraretti et al. (2013), reporting is
done nationally as well as centrally. Romania is one of the countries where the data is
self-reported by the clinics and collected by a national medical organization. Reporting
5. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
is voluntary. In many of the other countries surveyed there was a national registry
(Appendix 1). This in itself may indicate the level of legal, social and state prioritization
of IVF. Of the 12 clinics that self-reported cycles, treatment types and IVF successes in
2009, there were 606 IVF treatment cycles. Total cycles of assisted reproductive
technologies, including ICSI and egg donation, were 1052. There were 929 cycles of IVF
initiated, 598 aspirations and a resultant 4.3% deliveries per aspiration. The total
number of assisted reproductive technology babies delivered was 66, with IVF
deliveries numbering 26 (of 158 clinical pregnancies). This is the lowest figure for IVF
deliveries reported in all of the 34 countries surveyed (Ferraretti et al., 2013).
In terms of egg donation in Romania, there were 13 egg donations, eight transfers of
fertilized ova (from fresh, not thawed, oocytes) and two pregnancies (ibid). The local
rates of egg donation are very low and considerably lower than the number of Romanian
egg donors abroad. According to a study by ESHRE published in 2014 (Pennings et al.,
2014), Romanian women comprised the largest group of immigrant egg donors in
Europe. These donors tend to go to Greece and Spain to donate their eggs in exchange
for monetary compensation. It is unclear as yet whether they are part of the 900,000
Romanians living in Spain or whether they travel solely for the purpose of the
procedure. However, given that Spain has changed its policy of donation, and now tends
to focus on donations from Spanish residents, it is probable that these donors are part of
the Romanian migrant population there. What is clear is that they formed a sizeable
group among the 25,187 cycles of IVF with egg donation (22% of all IVF cycles are with
egg donation in Europe) in Europe in 2010 (Kupka et al., 2014).
IVF in surrounding countries
There is a unique situation in Romanian IVF. Despite Romania being a technologically
developed country, and playing an important role in being a supply country for
European egg donation, and despite its doctors having the technical abilities to make a
66-year-old woman a mother, Romania does not play a leading role in IVF. The reasons
for that will be explored below.
First, as discussed above, the number of births following IVF in Romania is low, yet
Romanian women form a relatively sizeable population of foreign egg donors in other
European countries. It might be argued that all Eastern European countries struggle
when it comes to successful IVF rates and that Romania perhaps forms part of a regional
picture. However, the higher rates of IVF and resultant babies in the surrounding
countries negate that argument.
Specifically, in this section the paper reviews the ESHRE figures (Ferraretti et al., 2013)
for IVF rates and outcomes for the countries surrounding Romania (population 20
million): Moldova (population 4 million), Ukraine (population 45 million), Hungary
(population 10 million), Bulgaria (population 7 million) and Serbia (population 7
million). These are countries with some political and economic similarities as well as
geographic proximity. There is not the space here to consider the specifics of each
country’s political and economic landscape. However, future research comparing these
6. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
regional similarities and differences might be useful in order to formulate correlations
between IVF provision, outcomes, economics and culture.
First, as Romania has a higher number of IVF clinics than all of these surrounding
countries, one might expect it to have high rates of IVF deliveries. Fewer than half of the
26 clinics reported rates to the ESHRE study and of those that did, low rates of IVF
deliveries are nonetheless present. This compares to the surrounding countries as
follows: Moldova, a much smaller country in size, has just one clinic. Serbia and Hungary
have 12 clinics each, and Bulgaria has 17 clinics. Ukraine has 21 clinics. Yet Romania has
the lowest rates of IVF deliveries across Europe (see Appendix 2).
Second, an examination of the numbers of treatment cycles is helpful in seeing whether
treatment cycles and numbers of clinics correlate to numbers of babies born. Whilst
Romania had 929 cycles of IVF, Hungary had 1230, Bulgaria 431, Moldova 255, Serbia
291 and Ukraine 2858 treatment cycles for IVF. The comparison between numbers of
clinics and cycles does not yield parallel results. Meanwhile, Bulgaria and Serbia
reported 123 and 77 IVF deliveries, respectively. Moldova with it sole clinic reported
much higher numbers of resultant babies. There were 258 assisted reproductive
technology deliveries in 2009 and 84 IVF deliveries. Finally, Ukraine with its 21 clinics
generated 2792 assisted reproductive technology deliveries and 831 IVF deliveries.
Ukraine has the highest numbers of treatment cycles and resultant babies and merits
greater attention. Ukraine is known as one of the larger Eastern European centres for
cross-border reproduction. With egg donation legal in Ukraine, it is more likely
nowadays to be a place where foreigners come for assisted reproduction. This country
has clinics that provide donor gametes plus inexpensive treatment to discerning global
assisted reproductive technology consumers.
When compared with these countries it can be seen that numbers of clinics in Romania
is not a determining factor for success, and indeed it is important to note that success
can be measured in different ways. Romania has many more clinics than some of the
surrounding countries. However, treatment cycles are not a good predictor of success;
Romania’s 929 cycles are more numerous than in some of the other surrounding
countries, yet its success rates fall far short by comparison. Only 26 IVF deliveries in
Romania seems strikingly low and it leads one to question whether there is anything
else that contributes to this statistic other than just the factors above.
We turn now to the ethical and legal aspects of Romanian IVF and then to economic and
migration factors.
Legal and ethical aspects
Romanian IVF came under the global spotlight with respect to legal and ethical issues
when it was discovered, and reported by the BBC, that a clinic in Romania was
extracting eggs from young women and that these eggs were being sold to women in a
London clinic. Further to that, Romanian IVF and egg donation once again came under
the spotlight in 2005 when Adriana Illiescu, a 66-year-old former university professor,
gave birth to her daughter Eliza, who was conceived via IVF with donated gametes. Since
7. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
then, scholars and bioethicists have examined the ethical, social and legal aspects of
these events (Dickenson, 2007; Widdows, 2009; Waldby and Cooper, 2008; Nahman,
2006; Bretonniere, 2013; Cutas, 2007).
Between 1995 and 2003 there were no laws governing assisted reproduction in
Romania. Indeed, there was relative silence surrounding the ethical and legal aspects of
assisted reproductive technologies for a number of reasons. First, the high degree of
religious affiliation to the Romanian Orthodox Church (in 2002, 87% of the Romanian
population identified themselves as belonging to the Orthodox Church [Ioan and
Astarastoae, 2008]), which was not initially supportive of assisted reproductive
technologies. Second, the history of repressive anti-abortion politics – the legal and
social taboos surrounding assisted reproductive technologies – prevented the proposal
of a law governing assisted reproductive technologies for some time. Third, physicians
felt it unnecessary to have laws governing their practice, as they believed in their own
strong moral and professional codes that govern how they operate. The Orthodox
Church held its own Bioethics Commission and decided that assisted reproductive
technologies using a couple’s own gametes are acceptable. Meanwhile, they rejected
using gametes not belonging to the couple as this, it was argued, is similar to adultery.
Finally, the Commission rejected the use of embryos in research and argued that a
reduction of embryos in IVF is like abortion (Ioan and Astarastoae, 2008). Despite the
aforementioned oppositions to a legal intervention concerning IVF and assisted
reproduction in Romania, in 2003 a draft bill covering assisted reproductive
technologies came out. In June 2004 it was adopted in the Romanian National Senate.
However, this draft law was found to contravene the Romanian Constitution because it
denied access to IVF by gay couples. The Romanian President Basescu vetoed the law
(Bretonniere, 2013; Cutas, 2007).
A few years later, in 2009, when the global attention that had been on Romania had
faded somewhat, a patient support network for infertility and IVF was set up, the
Acociatia SOS Infertilitatea. This group advocates that infertility be recognized as an
illness and works to make it a subject spoken about openly and taken seriously by
government. It was initiated by Nicoleta Cristea-Brunel, who stated:
I had consulted Romanian forums on the web and read about people in Romania with
fertility issues, who had to sell their car and mortgage their house for treatment. In
France I had simply paid my regular health care contribution, because there, infertility is
considered an illness, and the health care system assisted me in my attempts to have a
baby. I had a strong empathy with the couples in Romania living this drama, and I asked
them if they wanted help. I realized that they had not been asking for anything, because
there was no association for patients afflicted by infertility, and I started by writing
petitions to the Health Ministry in 2008. (http://old.rri.ro/arh-art.shtml?lang = 1 and
sec = 27 and art = 317875; accessed March 31 2016)
This small group of approximately 90 members has lobbied parliament to create a policy
of state-sponsored IVF. They produce a blog, organize events and have links with
Fertility Europe and other organizations inside and outside of Romania, in order to
expand awareness and support for IVF in the country. One of their main media
8. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
campaigning slogans is ‘Infertility is a Medical Condition’. Until now, according to SOS,
infertility was a taboo topic in Romania.
IVF is costly in Romania, as in other places, amounting to approximately €3000–5000
per cycle of IVF. Romanian couples who can afford to, travel to neighbouring countries
to access cheaper treatments. This patient advocacy group employed concerted energies
to garner financial support for legislation and acknowledgement of the seriousness of
the issue of infertility. Indeed: ‘After almost three years of intense activity of our
Association ….[a] national IVF program will be implemented in 2011 and 2012 and the
couples that need IVF will benefit of compensation from the health insurance funds for
one IVF attempt’ (SOS Infertilitatea Association,
http://infertilitate.com/miscelanea/english/). The Romanian government dedicated
approximately €1 million to this one-year experiment. At a time of economic austerity,
this indicates that the people involved in the Association had worked hard and
mobilized the support of doctors and MPs, as well as becoming affiliated to infertility
associations internationally. It also indicates that the government itself may have been
motivated to develop this arena, as indicated above.
It is clear that there is also increasing interest from the Romanian government to
support IVF. A new initiative to train Romanian gynaecologists in a system used by
Greek physicians, and a programme of subsidies is being trialled (Alexandra Gruian,
personal communication; Craiu, 2014). In addition to improving success rates locally, it
may be the case that more international training for physicians is part of Romania’s
marketing strategy for fertility tourism and for improving healthcare so as to become
seen as a ‘successful’ European state.
Romanian economy and migration
Thus far, this paper has examined IVF in Romania in terms of its origins, ethical
dimensions and the present-day situation. It has indicated that there may be additional
factors affecting the low success rates of IVF in this country and how late it began
providing IVF. We turn now to its economic situation as one way of arguing that the
global economic situation and its local impacts on Romania are important factors in the
history of Romanian IVF.
Economy and labour
The international financial crisis that began in 2008 severely affected Romanian
industries. Construction, agriculture and services were particularly badly affected.
Wages fell below the level of inflation. Indeed, Romanian wages are among the lowest in
EU member states. Although Romania had very strong trade union and labour
protection laws, this changed after the 2008 global economic crisis (Trif, 2014).
According to the industrial relations analyst Aurora Trif, the government changed
policies, which led to ‘the implosion of trade unions’ fundamental rights to bargain
collectively, to form trade unions and to take industrial action’ (Trif, 2014: 1). While
foreign investors viewed Romanian union laws with suspicion as too protectionist,
9. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
‘labour market regulations were not perceived [by foreign investors] as hindering the
competitiveness of Romania’ (Trif, 2014: 4).
Despite this economic crisis, Romania has one of the lowest unemployment rates in
Europe. This seems to be partly due to people ‘exiting’ employment in two ways. They
either shifted to the vast informal economy or they emigrated abroad (Stan and Erne,
2014). These two types of employment ‘exit’ account for around 45% of the population
of the entire country. Importantly, during this time of economic crisis, where foreign
investment is very high, the informal economy has grown from 22% of the population in
2007 to 29% in 2012 (European Commission, 2013: 5; Trif, 2014: 7). Political economist
Cornel Ban argues convincingly that the economic downturn in Romania is closely
linked to its openness to foreign investment, which correlates to 85% of Romania’s total
banking assets (Ban, 2013).
These economic and labour issues provide the context in which women and their
partners negotiate questions about reproducing through assisted reproductive
technologies. They echo the argument voiced by the research participants in my study
who stated they did not want children of their own (and hence wished to donate ova to
women from other countries), because ‘Romania is a difficult place to live’.
Migration
Taking the above into account, it should come as no surprise that Romanian nationals
make up the second largest group of all European migrants in Europe. Approximately
2.7 million people have migrated out of Romania across Europe, which is 15% of the
Romanian population (Stan and Erne, 2014). This mass exit did not occur during the
1990s economic recession, but rather after 2000 when the Romanian economy saw
growth. However, ‘low wages were one of the key factors that led to massive labour
migration before (and after) the crisis and low labour force participation’ (Trif, 2014: 4).
During this period of growth, the industries that saw the most growth were ‘real estate
and financial speculation, household, business and public debt and export-oriented
manufacturing in both light and heavy industries’ (Stan and Erne, 2014: 22–23). This led
to an expansion of the middle class. Yet the largest group of working class Romanians
did not have many viable alternatives other than migration.
These economic and migration factors give a good indication as to why IVF might not be
the highest priority for the majority of Romanians, unlike in Denmark where IVF babies
comprise 4.6% of the population (Ferraretti et al., 2013). We turn now to Romania’s
strong contribution to cross-border egg donor population and original research I
conducted on this topic.
Cross-border egg donation, the missing link in Romania’s IVF history
On an unseasonably warm September day in 2002 I sat in the courtyard garden at the
Bucharest IVF clinic of Dr Shmuel, one of the self-described international ‘pioneers’ of
oocyte donation. During 2002 I conducted ethnographic observations and interviews at
an IVF clinic in Bucharest owned by Dr Shmuel, an Israeli man whose family had
immigrated to Israel. Although that clinic was shut down in 2005 due to claims of
10. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
insufficient consent practices and ovarian hyperstimulation, I was fortunate to be
permitted time in the clinic and interviewed 21 Romanian women who were first-,
second- or third-time egg ‘donors’. I lodged at the clinic, slept in a comfortable room and
interviewed the women in the evenings when they came to get injections or in the
daytime before and after oocyte extraction. I was present for many of the aspiration
procedures to extract follicular fluid from women’s ovaries and watched the ‘drama’
unfold as these were taken into the adjacent laboratory to perform all the steps involved
in making fertilized ova (Nahman, 2006, 2013).
In the 1990s, practising oocyte donation in Romania with financial compensation was
unregulated and not illegal. In my research with 50 Israeli couples (men and women)
undergoing IVF with egg donation, as well as numerous physicians engaged in cross-
border egg donation, I came across at least two Israeli clinics that were operating in
Bucharest. The first clinic was described to me as a ‘well-oiled machine’ by one of my
Jewish Israeli research participants (Dorit, Israeli egg recipient, interview 2002).
Together with the IVF clinic which she attended in Israel to receive all the hormonal
preparations for receiving a fertilized egg or ovum, the partner clinic in Romania was
owned and operated by an Israeli company who had arranged all of her international
travel, accommodation and transport within Romania, as well as suggesting tours she
could take in the city of Bucharest and beyond. Staying at the well-known Bucharest
‘Hotel Central’, she was aware she was surrounded by other women who, like her, were
also reluctantly attempting to become pregnant through IVF with egg donation, and
were secretly visiting the clinic in Romania.
The second Israeli clinic that provided cross-border egg donation in Romania at the time
worked slightly differently. It performed what I have called ‘reverse traffic’ (Nahman,
2008). That is, instead of the patients travelling to the clinic, the fertilized ova were
cryopreserved and transported in canisters to Israel by the head doctor and his chief
embryologist. The use of this language of ‘traffic’ not only denotes the directionality of
travel but also hints to the reader that there may be an element of circumventing the
laws in some European countries against egg donation by ‘importing’ not oocytes but
fertilized ova frozen at the 2 pro-nucleate (PN)-stage. Legally, they are not eggs, nor are
they considered embryos yet. Thus, what happens in this process is that bodily
substances taken from highly economically precarious unwaged donors, receiving a one-
off payment, are ‘trafficked’, without it appearing, according to any law, as trafficking. No
people are moved around, only substance. This kind of circumvention of laws happens
in other places as well (Bergmann, 2011).
Elena, who was in her early twenties, smoked a cigarette in the hour or so after
undergoing her second oocyte aspiration, with mild sedation. The aspiration procedure
involved the removal of follicular fluid (which contains the eggs) from her ovaries. She
told me that in her day-to-day life she managed a small bookshop part-time while
studying for her architecture/planning degree at university. Her salary, a good one by
Romanian standards and for the type of job, amounted to 32 cents (US) an hour. The
US$200 equivalent she was about to receive in an envelope in cash for her eggs was, by
comparison, a small fortune. She was a student who wanted me to know that her studies
were conducted in French, her second language, and here we were conversing fluently
11. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
in English. My own maternal grandmother had always tried to impress upon me how
cosmopolitan Romania was. She too, back in the 1930s in rural Romania, had been
schooled in both French and Romanian. Romania has long strived to be counted as part
of a wider Western Europe. Elena was one of hundreds of young women who came to
this clinic to be a paid egg ‘donor’ over a few years from the late 1990s to the early
2000s (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4237393.stm). She had heard of it
from her friend who worked for a linen laundering service opposite the clinic. In a
country where infertility was a taboo subject, secrecy also surrounded the donation of
oocytes. Most of the women here did not tell anyone that they were going for oocyte
aspiration. Yet there was another sense throughout all my interviews that the women
were aspirational, trying to participate in a new cultural phenomenon of oocyte
donation in exchange for money. As I have argued elsewhere, in post-socialist Romania
where abortions were outlawed by Ceausescu and ‘adoption tourism’ flourished, getting
to do something with one’s reproductive capacities and participate in a global market
and in the cultural transformation that has been brought about by IVF seemed like a
very interesting prospect to many of the women I spoke to (Nahman, 2006, 2013).
Although some women in the clinic felt sadness and shame, the majority of the women I
interviewed seemed matter-of-fact about it. ‘Romania is a hard place to live’, I was told
repeatedly by those I encountered in clinics, and elsewhere. Romanian women were
aspiring to a better existence by exchanging their oocytes for money.
The clinic in which Elena and I were sitting in 2002 no longer exists as it once did, a
place where women came to have hormonal injections for a month prior to ‘donating’
their eggs there. It was reportedly shut down after two women took the chief physician
and owner to court for negative health outcomes following their hormonal injections
and oocyte extraction. The doctor practising the oocyte extractions, not a qualified IVF
specialist but a GP, was prevented from practising medicine for one year and then was
permitted to return to practice.
Discussion
Romania is a border country into and out of Europe, and a latecomer to the EU.
Westerners often perceive it as lagging behind the rest of Europe in areas of health,
education and work. However, in the 1930s it was already striving for integration with
Europe, with physicians trained abroad in France and Germany, and French and German
influences on policies of reproduction and health. Indeed, in the 1930s abortion was
allowed in Romania, albeit solely for eugenic purposes or eliminating so-called
‘degenerates’ (Turda, 2009). Ceausescu’s coercive anti-abortion laws led not only to
many fatal and dangerous underground abortions but also to the images seen in the
media in the 1980s of neglected children in Romanian orphanages. It seems that these
tropes of Romanian reproduction could only lead to stories of oocyte theft, for which
Romania is famous.
In the worlds of anthropology, bioethics and beyond, Romanian IVF tends to be known
for oocyte donation more than anything else. A few years ago, when scholars and
activists became fascinated by Romanian egg donation, it was due to the events that
were becoming known around the world as the ‘theft’ or ‘trafficking’ of oocytes from
12. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
women there. At the time, Romanian egg donation procedures had little in place
concerning donor consent and standards of treatment were largely unregulated. There
was a concern that this country on the ‘edge’ of Europe, about to enter its Union, was
going to symbolically contaminate modern-day Europe with practices deemed ‘un-
European’. Romanian women were viewed as unliberated and oppressed. Framed
within the legacy of the oppressive Ceausescu era banning of abortion, Romania was
imagined as a place of unfettered reproduction, disease and backwardness. To the rest
of Europe, Romania was a place that needed to be reined in and civilized, and also as a
place to invest capital due to extremely low wages.
If one were to solely examine its history of reproduction, without looking at factors such
as the economy, migration and labour relations, one might have been surprised that
Romanians themselves were hardly benefiting at all from the technologies that were
assisting reproduction across its borders. Romania was at once a place speeding ahead
in the global provision of donated eggs and precursor embryos, but lagging significantly
in the global race of ‘firsts’ with respect to IVF. This contradiction is a significant aspect
of the ‘IVF in Romania’ history, and indeed in the global IVF history, that bears further
exploration.
The specificity of Romania’s economic and political history, whilst providing context and
depth, also extends to how we construct IVF histories themselves and the historical
place of oocyte donation practices within those histories. Some national contexts, such
as Romania in this case, can become symbolic figures in global IVF. As the
anthropologists Sarah Franklin and Marilyn Strathern have shown (Franklin, 1997,
2013; Strathern, 1992), while IVF is a technology for making people, and of remaking
kinship and biology, it is at the same time heavily indebted to shifts in the global
economy and migration for how it has developed, where it has gone and to what extent
it is being taken up. The relative slowness or lack of IVF in Romania – despite the
cosmopolitan population and businesses and the state-level links with other European
states – illustrates some tensions between IVF more broadly and cross-border
reproduction in particular. Some national contexts seem more inclined towards being
providing societies; for example, until recently, India was a major global supplier of
surrogacy. Similarly, Romanian economic, migration and fertility histories position it as
more of a provider of oocytes than a place for IVF. Although 85% of Romania’s assets are
foreign-owned, a high percentage of the population is not employed by these industries
but rather employed informally and abroad. There is an ‘extractive market’ in Romania.
Concomitantly, the vast majority of Romanian women are not engaged in seeking to
become pregnant via IVF. They are seeking to find ways to survive in an almost
impossible economic situation.
Furthermore, as in many developing societies, things such as access to safe abortion and
the fight for abortion remain ever-present. As documented above, abortion rates are
very high in Romania and anti-abortion politics are on the rise. Romanian feminists
themselves seem relatively unconcerned with IVF compared with their fight for abortion
rights for women and other issues (this has been confirmed by Romanian doctoral
researcher and feminist activist Alexandra Gruian [personal communication]). An
examination of Romanian feminist online spaces indicates that issues such as the fight
13. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
against domestic violence and sexual abuse, and equal rights to education, healthcare
and in the workplace feature most strongly on the agenda.
Meanwhile, despite the fact that feminists seem relatively inattentive to IVF as a social
issue, the Romanian government itself is attempting to promote IVF growth, as
mentioned earlier through initiatives to support the education of Romanian doctors by
foreign IVF experts (Craiu, 2014). It is part of a wider World Bank initiative in Romania
to increase Romanian economic development and stability. One of the areas of
improvement promoted by this initiative is the arena of health and healthcare. Maternal
mortality is cited as a major risk factor, as is the need to improve patient and outpatient
care (World Bank, 2014). Recently the Romanian government cited IVF as an area it
wanted to improve and the Ministry of Health requested greater financial investment to
this end (http://www.romania-insider.com/romanias-ministry-of-health-asks-for-
higher-budget-in-2015/136528/).
It should not be ruled out that nationalism is one reason for the slight rise in promotion
of IVF by the government, alongside the concomitant concern about high levels of
abortions. In 2013 the Romanian President Traian Basescu stated to a meeting of
‘business women’:
How on earth can Roma women have five or six children, and [ethnic] Romanian women
cannot?’ ….I wouldn’t want to ask how many of you have any children. Listen, I have
been working hard to convince my daughters to have children, whether married or
unmarried, ‘Girls, have at least one child, after all it’s a patriotic act. (cited in Iordache,
2014: 147).
In Romania, IVF is the younger sibling of egg donation, conceived much later. This fact
seems important in the characterization of IVF in this context. Whilst geographically
located within Europe and the EU, Romania is widely considered to be a developing
country (but in the higher ranks of those countries, alongside Brazil and Russia). In a bid
to create economic growth the World Bank has enrolled Romania in its Country
Partnership Strategy 2014–2017, aligning with a wider regional strategy the aims of
which are broadly to create a ‘government of the 21st century’, growth and jobs, and
social inclusion. The investment from the EU involves funding to support better
healthcare, and learning from other EU countries. It is likely that the IVF training cited
by Craiu (2014) is part of this wider development process the country is undergoing
with World Bank assistance.
That oocyte donation came before IVF for the majority of people in Romania indicates
we can think of Romania as what Sharmila Rudrappa and I call an ‘extractive
reproductive economy’. The women I spoke to in a Bucharest IVF clinic said they were
selling their eggs to get ‘a better life’ (Nahman, 2013). They were what anthropologist
Lawrence Cohen terms ‘bioavailable’, turning themselves into something like a ‘natural
resource’, or capitalizing on their bodily assets of eggs to improve their lives. Romanian
IVF is one of the areas where the intensity of austerity is felt in a widespread fashion so
that ‘improvement’ and ‘assistance’ come to mean very specific things about
participating in a global neoliberal economy as well as about reproducing. In this
particular account of IVF then, egg donation is central. Whilst seemingly on the borders
14. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
of Europe in the imaginations of the leaders of the EU, and in the national imaginaries of
the most powerful states within that union, the Romanian experience tells us something
that is at the heart of IVF as a technology: that part of what IVF remakes and reveals are
economic relations, migrational ones, and relations of labour and care. In the context of
Europe trying to develop its border states, IVF is one route to modernizing Romanian
society and making it economically viable. For the majority of Romanian women, IVF has
not meant an opportunity to have a child, or being impelled to use technology that is
available. Rather, for most Romanian women who are seeking to remain child-free, or to
have smaller families, or migrate elsewhere, IVF technology has provided an
opportunity for a new kind of income via egg donation in a way that is comparable to
women in other countries considered to be economically depressed.
Acknowledgements
I am very grateful to all the women and men who spoke with me about their experiences
of cross-border reproduction in Romania and Israel. I would like to thank Sarah
Franklin, Marcia Inhorn and Zeynep Gurtin for inviting me to participate in this
Symposium and for all the enriching feedback they have provided. Thank you to UWE
Faculty of Health and Social Sciences for granting me additional time to write. Thank you
to Dr Francoise Shenfield for invaluable feedback and to Alexandra Gruian for some
highly insightful links to Romanian legislation and fruitful discussion. My thanks to the
reviewers of this paper, participants at the IVF Histories
conference at Yale in 2015, and to the anonymous reviewers of this paper for offering
some important insights and questions. The research was funded by the Wenner Gren
Foundation for Anthropological Research, and the Social Science and Humanities
Research Council of Canada.
Appendix 1
Reporting methods in those countries where all clinics reported to the
national register in 2009
Country Number
of IVF
clinics in
the
country
Number of
clinics
reporting
IVF
cycles
IVF
deliveries
Egg
donation
Egg
donation
deliveries
Romania 12 8 606 26 13 1
Hungary 12 12 1230 No data 61 No data
Moldova 1 1 255 84 No data No data
Bulgaria 17 8 431 123 52 25
Serbia 12 9 291 77 No data No data
Ukraine 21 15 2858 831 704 226
15. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
Ferraretti et al. (2013) Assisted reproductive technology in Europe, 2009: results
generated from European registers by ESHRE. Supplementary data:
http://humrep.oxfordjournals.org/content/suppl/2013/06/14/det278.DC1 (accessed
11 July 2016).
Appendix 2
IVF and egg donation in six central European states
Country Requirements Responsibility Reporting methods
Cycles Deliveries
All reporting
Austria Compulsory National Health Authority Individual Individual
Belgium Compulsory National Health Authority Individual Individual
Croatia Compulsory National Health Authority Summaries Summaries
Cyprus Compulsory National Health Authority Summaries Summaries
Czech Republic Compulsory National Health Authority Individual Individual
Denmark Voluntary Medical Organization Summaries Summaries
Finland Compulsory National Health Authority Summaries Summaries
France Compulsory National Health Authority Summaries Summaries
Germany Compulsory Medical Organization Individual Individual
Hungary Compulsory National Health Authority Individual Individual
Iceland Compulsory Medical Organization Summaries Summaries
Italy Compulsory National Health Authority Summaries Summaries
Macedonia Voluntary Medical Organization Summaries Summaries
Moldova Compulsory Medical Organization Summaries Summaries
Montenegro Compulsory Medical Organization Summaries Summaries
Norway Compulsory National Health Authority Summaries Summaries
Portugal Compulsory National Health Authority Summaries Summaries
Slovenia Compulsory National Health Authority Summaries Summaries
Sweden Compulsory Medical Organization Individual Individual
The Netherlands Compulsory Medical Organization Summaries Summaries
United Kingdom Compulsory National Health Authority Individual Individual
Partially reporting
Bulgaria Voluntary National Health Authority Summaries Summaries
Greece Voluntary National Health Authority Summaries Summaries
Ireland Voluntary Medical Organization Summaries Summaries
Kazakhstan Voluntary National Health Authority Summaries Summaries
Latvia Voluntary Medical Organization Summaries Summaries
Lithuania Voluntary Personal initiative Summaries Summaries
Poland Voluntary Medical Organization Summaries Summaries
Romania Voluntary Medical Organization Summaries Summaries
Russia Voluntary Medical Organization Summaries Summaries
Serbia Voluntary Medical Organization Individual Individual
Spain Voluntary Medical Organization Summaries Summaries
Switzerland Voluntary Medical Organization Individual Individual
Ukraine Voluntary Medical Organization Summaries Summaries
Data drawn from Ferraretti et al. (2013) Assisted reproductive technology in Europe,
2009: results generated from European registers by ESHRE. Supplementary data:
http://humrep.oxfordjournals.org/content/suppl/2013/06/14/det278.DC1 (accessed
11 July 2016).
16. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
References
Ban, C (2013) ‘From Cocktail to Dependence Revisiting the Foundations of Dependent
Market Economies’ http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id = 2233056
(last accessed 21 December 2015)
Bergmann, S. (2011) ‘Fertility Tourism: Circumventive Routes That Enable Access to
Reproductive Technologies and. Substances.’ Signs, Vol. 36, No. 2 (Winter 2011), pp.
280–289.
Bretonniere, (2013) From laboratories to chambers of parliament and beyond:
Producing bioethics in France and Romania’ Social Science and Medicine. Vol 93,
September, p95–102.
Craiu, Petronius (2014) A fost lansat primul program de e-learning pe teme de
infertilitate din România, http://www.agerpres.ro/sanatate/2014/09/27/a-fost-lansat-
primul-program-de-e-learning-pe-teme-de-infertilitate-din-romania-11–15–38, Last
accessed 21 December, 2015.
Cutas, D. (2007) On a Romanian Attempt to Legislate Assisted Reproduction. Bioethics.
Vol 22 Num 1, p56–63.
Dickenson, D. (2007) Property in the Body: Feminist Perspectives. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Ferraretti et al. 2013 ‘Assisted reproductive technology in Europe, 2009: results
generated from European registers by ESHRE’ Supplementary data
http://humrep.oxfordjournals.org/content/suppl/2013/06/14/det278.DC1
Firuleasa, L et al. (2010) ‘Ethical Dilemmas of Intra-vitro Fertilization’ Management In
Health, Vol 14, No 2.
Kupka, M. S. et al., (2014) ‘Assisted reproductive technology in Europe, 2010: results
generated from European registers by ESHRE’. Human Reproduction. 29(10): 2099–
2113.
Ferarreti, A. P. et al. (2013) Assisted reproductive technology in Europe, 2009: results
generated from European registers by ESHRE. Human Reproduction, Vol.28, No.9 pp.
2318–2331.
Franklin, S. (1997) Embodied Progress. A Cultural Account of Assisted Conception.
Routledge: London, New York.
Franklin, S. (2013) Biological Relatives: IVF Stem Cells and the Future of Kinship. Durham
and London: Duke.
Ioan, B. and Astarastoae, V (2008) ‘Ethical and Legal Aspects in Medically Assisted
Human Reproduction in Romania’ Human Reproduction and Genetic Ethics. Vol. 14. Num.
2. P 2–13
17. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
Iordache, A. (2014) ‘The Discourse and Control of Reproduction in Communist and Post-
Communist Romania’ Analyse:Journal of Gender and Feminist Studies. 16(2):128–159.
Kligman, Gail (1998) Politics of Duplicity: Controlling Reproduction in Ceausescu’s
Romania. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Nahman, M. (2013) Extractions: An Ethnography of Reproductive Tourism. Basingstoke:
Palgrave Macmillan.
Nahman, M. (2011a) ‘Reverse Traffic: Intersecting Inequalities in human egg
‘donation’. Reproductive Biomedicine Online (Issue 23, November)
Nahman, M. (2011b) ‘Making Interferences: The Cultural Politics of Egg Donation’ in
Michi Knecht et al. (eds.) IVF as a Global Form. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Nahman, M. (2006) ‘Nodes of Desire: Transnational Egg Sellers as Theorists of
Reproduction in a Neo-Liberal Age’, European Journal of Women’s Studies. 15:2
Nahman, M. (2005) Israeli Extraction: An Ethnographic Study of Ova Donation and
National Imaginaries’, Ph.D. dissertation. Lancaster University.
Pennings, G. et al. (2014) Socio-demographic and fertility-related characteristics and
motivations of oocyte donors in eleven European Countries Hum. Reprod. 29 (5): 1076–
1089
Philipov, D., amd J. Dorbritz. 2003. Demographic consequences of economic transition in
countries of central and eastern Europe, Population Studies 39: 1–189.
Stan, S. and Erne, R. (2014) Explaining Romanian labor migration: from development
gaps to development. Labor History, 55:1, 21–46.
Strathern, M (1992) After Nature: English Kinship in the Late Twentieth Century.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Trif, A. (2014) Austerity and Collective Bargaining in Romania National report: Romania.
Online report,
http://www.research.mbs.ac.uk/ewerc/Portals/0/docs/SDDTEC/Romania%20Final.pd
f (Accessed 25.03.2015)
Turda, M, (2009) ‘ ‘To End the Degeneration of a Nation’: Debates on Eugenic
Sterilization in Inter-war Romania’ Medical History 22(2): 77–104.
Turda, M. (2014) ‘The Nation as Object: Race, Blood, and Biopolitics in Interwar
Romania’ Slavic Review 66(3): 413–441.
Waldby C and Cooper M (2008) The biopolitics of reproduction: Post-Fordist
biotechnology and women’s clinical labour. Australian Feminist Studies 23(55): 57–73.
18. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
Widdows, H. (2009) ‘Border Disputes across Bodies: Exploitation in Trafficking for
Prostitution and Egg Sale for Stem Cell Research.’ IJFAB 2 (1): 5–24.
World Bank (2014) INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION and
DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL FINANCE CORPORATION COUNTRY PARTNERSHIP
STRATEGY (CPS) FOR ROMANIA FOR THE PERIOD 2014–2017. http://www-
wds.worldbank.org/external/default/WDSContentServer/WDSP/IB/2014/05/22/0003
50881_20140522133231/Rendered/PDF/848300REVISED0020Box385199B00OUO09
0.pdf Accessed 31 March 2016.
Declaration: The author reports no financial or commercial conflicts of interest.
19. ACCEPTED
MANUSCRIPT
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT
Dr Michal Nahman is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Health and Social Sciences
at the University of the West of England, Bristol. She has authored numerous papers and
recently published her anthropological account of cross-border reproduction,
Extractions: An Ethnography of Reproductive Tourism (Palgrave, 2013). Dr Nahman has
also been making an ethnographic film on motherhood. Her film ‘Atomised Mothers’ has
screened at film festivals and is being used in public education and university teaching.