


http://www.nationmultimedia.com/2011/09 ... 66125.html
Well spotted harve - mind you if anyone is daft enough to undergo an invasive procedure like that without money up front they deserve to get conned IMO. I mean we don't just lay them do we?pharvey wrote:1,000,000 Baht ''Reward''....... Hotmail account .... hmmmmmm
No problems Mags, I'm up for an omelette this morning anyway.margaretcarnes wrote:.....(Sorry Pete - don't think you're getting quite the moral issues response you were expecting here?)
Sensible thoughts IMO Takiap. And Thailand is by no means the only country where money changes hands for things like surrogacy and donors. Far from it in fact.Takiap wrote:Not sure about the hotmail account thingy. Many people, myself included, use gmail/hotmail and etc rather than mess about with other accounts.
About the eggs.........considering there are many extremely rich Chinese businessmen, it could very well be a legitimate offer. After all, a million baht is not really that much money. A mate of mine and his wife have been trying to have a child for several years already, and to date they've spent more than a million baht on IVF services in Thailand. After the last attempt, which failed, the clinic (the top one in Thailand) said they cannot agree to try again due to concerns regarding the woman's health, and also their own reputation. They have now suggested that some of the remaining eggs be implanted in a surrogate mother. The surrogate mother must be under the age of 25, and preferably have at least one kid of their own. The surrogate mother also has to be paid roughly 200,000 baht and be fully taken care of throughout the pregnancy.
They've tried this once already, but it never worked so they were spared the 200k expense. Now my mate and his wife only have seven eggs left in the egg bank, and if those don't work, their only option will be to use another woman's eggs and fertilize them with my mate's sperm. In other words, if it goes that far, my mate and his wife will basically be doing as is being done in the article this thread refers to, apart from the fact that the eggs won't need to be removed, or at least I don't think so.
Thailand says money cannot change hands, but money does change hands, and personally I can't see anything wrong with rewarding the surrogate parent. After all, she is going to have to carry the child for nine months, and then face the emotional hardship of handing that child over.
Now all we need is some rich Chinese business woman seeking male donors...... I bet her email inbox would be overflowing....lol.![]()