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In April, two women were given the “wrong embryos” in a mixup involving three women.
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It was revealed in October 2002 that another IVF mixup had occurred in Britain. 7 An independent inquiry into the mixup has also been launched. 6 The legal parentage and the fate of the twins is to be decided by the High Court. Several weeks after news of the mixup, genetic testing revealed that Mrs A is the babies’ “biological mother” but her husband, Mr A, is not their “biological father”. It is ironic, she concludes, in relation to the mixup with the black IVF babies, if both couples want the babies it “only goes to prove that their genetic makeup and colour is not of prime importance to either couple”. But it would not-could not-make them less mine. If I discovered that, in fact, they were the result of a stranger’s egg being accidentally lodged in the pipette that reimplanted my own, it would, of course, cause some heartache. There is nothing that can make them more our children. So how can I guarantee that they really are part of my family? Because I gave birth to them, fed them, and I am rearing them to the best of my ability. A British woman who has IVF twins who were born white writes: The hysterical response generated by the British mixup was examined in one newspaper. The biological father of that child did not try to claim his black biological child. In the Netherlands in 1993, a white woman gave birth to one black and one white child after receiving “mixed sperm from a poorly sterilised pipette”. After a “bitter custody battle” the black couple whose embryo was mistakenly implanted into the white woman won custody of the black baby. In the US in 1998, a white woman gave birth to one white and one black baby in what became known as the “scrambled eggs” case. In vitro fertilisation mixups have occurred before but not in Britain.
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The genetic test will be available soon and couples will pay around A$2000 for it. In vitro fertilisation clinics are being urged to review and tighten procedures and Melbourne IVF experts have announced that they have developed a test to check the paternity of embryos and prevent “blunders” like the one that has occurred in Britain. Mistakes are only apparent when a couple has a child of a different colour. It is thought that this case will cause huge concern among the many thousands of couples who have used IVF because mistakes could be going unnoticed. News of the mixup has elicited a range of reactions. Paternity, however, is “open to legal interpretation”. 1 Under the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 1990, a woman who has a child born through IVF, even if it is not genetically hers, is the “legal mother”. It is believed that Mr and Mrs A, the white couple, want to keep the babies and there is conjecture about Mr and Mrs B, the black couple, wanting them too. Prior to DNA testing, no one can be sure whether the white woman’s eggs were fertilised with the black man’s sperm, or the black couple’s embryo was mistakenly implanted in the white woman. A n IVF mixup has resulted in a white couple giving birth to black twins.