Surplus embryo donation: terminology and ethico-legal perspectives
Roy Gilbar, Sivan Tamir

TL;DR
The paper discusses the terminology and ethical implications of donating surplus embryos for reproductive purposes, arguing that 'donation' is more appropriate than 'adoption'.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel argument for using 'donation' over 'adoption' in the context of embryo disposition, highlighting its ethical and legal implications.
Findings
The term 'embryo adoption' is conceptually misleading and legally inappropriate.
Empirical evidence suggests that the non-personhood of embryos supports the use of 'donation' terminology.
Legal and policy distinctions between donation and adoption justify the preference for 'donation'.
Abstract
Numerous cryopreserved surplus embryos are being stored in IVF units in Western countries. IVF patients are required to choose and consent to disposition options for their surplus embryos upon starting treatment. We focus on the option of embryo donation to others for reproductive purposes. The terminology used for this practice is inconsistent, as the term embryo ‘donation’ is used interchangeably with embryo ‘adoption’ in different jurisdictions, government programs, and by private initiatives. Our main argument is that the selected terminology bears conceptual and other consequences for public attitudes, in a way which affects the choice of such a surplus embryo-disposition-option. More specifically, we contend that the pairing of ‘embryo-adoption’ is misguided. We identify material, legal, and policy-related points of distinction between the practices of donation and adoption. Then,…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsReproductive Health and Technologies · Reproductive Biology and Fertility · Assisted Reproductive Technology and Twin Pregnancy
