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Monday, 9 October 2017

Britain's most prolific sperm donor has fathered 34 children, Govt data reveals

The country's most prolific sperm donor has fathered 34 children, official statistics show.
Men are often compensated with £35 expenses for each sample, as laws state they can't be paid for the act.
Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority figures suggest the anonymous man has been paid £1,190 for his donations.Government data also showed there to be at least 667 'super-dads' - those who have given their samples to the full 10 families they are allowed to
The Government agency's data also showed there to be at least 667 'super-dads' - those who have fathered at least 10 offspring.
Donated sperm cannot be used to create more than 10 families, the HFEA states, but families can use the same sample more than once. This explains why donors can have more than 10 children.
Britain's second-most prominent donor has 31 children, and 17 men have produced 20 or more, The Sun reports.
Professor Allan Pacey, former chief executive of the British Fertility Society, said: 'I suspect the top donors were recruited before clinics knew how best to control how many children were born per donor.'
The data used in the statistics
The HFEA statistics are based on official donors from licenced fertility clinics, not those who have given samples privately.
Official sperm donors have no legal parental rights and are not required to support the child financially.
However, a law passed in 2005 meant children born to sperm donors have the right to know their father's identity when they turn 18.
Growing trend for home kits







Home artificial insemination is a growing practice in the UK, because demand for semen far outweighs supply. Men often advertise their services online.



Private semen exchange doesn't have the same safety checks used in fertility clinics, and the NHS warns it is 'potentially risky'.

Insemination kits, which consist of semen pots and syringes to inject the sample, can be bought online without the need for sexual intercourse.

However, some donors prefer natural insemination, the practice of unprotected sex with the recipient.

Donate sperm and 'change lives'

The new figures come after an English hospital in March was encouraging young men to 'change lives' and donate sperm.

Whittington Hospital in Highgate, London, called on 'altruistic men' aged between 18 and 45 to give samples in a 'not for profit' sperm bank.

Staff, who will sell the sperm to infertile couples, insisted it was time to shake off the notion that sperm donation is 'kind of weird and seedy'.




Dutch sperm donor scandals

The HFEA figures come after a Dutch sperm donor became embroiled in a fertility scandal after it was found he had fathered 102 children.

An official investigation into the man's actions, who remains anonymous, showed he had given samples of his sperm to 11 different clinics.

And earlier this year, a controversial Dutch doctor was found to have illegally used his own sperm to father children with unsuspecting women.

Jan Karbaat who operated the MC Blijdorp fertility clinic in the town of Barendrecht, used his own sperm in 19 cases instead of the prescribed sperm donor.


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