Parenthood is a gift of god. Thanks to the development in
medical sciences, childless couples can now opt for surrogate pregnancies. If
women employees of Central Government organizations opt for surrogate
pregnancies, can they claim maternity leave?
Women employees of Central Government establishments are
given Maternity leave for a period of 180 days and male employees are given
Paternity Leave for a period of 15 days if they choose to adopt babies. At
present, there is no leave entitlements for parents of the surrogate child.
Let’s see what the Indian medical Research Council has to
say about couples who choose to have babies through surrogate mothers.
Surrogacy: General Considerations
A child born through surrogacy must be adopted by the
genetic (biological) parents unless they can establish through genetic
(DNA) fingerprinting (of which the records will be maintained in the
clinic) that the child is theirs.Guidelines for ART Clinics in India
ICMR/NAMS
Surrogacy by assisted conception should normally be
considered only for patients for whom it would be physically or medically
impossible/undesirable to carry a baby to term.
Payments to surrogate mothers should cover all genuine expenses associated
with the pregnancy. Documentary evidence of the financial arrangement for
surrogacy must be available. The ART centre should not be involved in this
monetary aspect.
Advertisements regarding surrogacy should not be made by the
ART clinic. The responsibility of finding a surrogate mother,
through advertisement or otherwise, should rest with the couple, or a
semen bank.
A surrogate mother should not be over 45 years of age.
Before accepting a woman as a possible surrogate for a particular couple’s
child, the ART clinic must ensure (and put on record) that the woman
satisfies all the testable criteria to go through a successful full-term
pregnancy.
A relative, a known person, as well as a person unknown to
the couple may act as a surrogate mother for the couple. In the case of a
relative acting as a surrogate, the relative should belong to the same
generation as the women desiring the surrogate.
A prospective surrogate mother must be tested for HIV and
shown to be seronegative for this virus just before embryo transfer. She
must also provide a written certificate that (a) she has not had a drug
intravenously administered into her through a shared syringe, (b) she has
not undergone blood transfusion; and (c) she and her husband (to the best
of her/his
knowledge) has had no extramarital relationship in the last six months.
(This is to ensure that the person would not come up with
symptoms of HIV infection during the period of surrogacy.) The prospective
surrogate mother must also declare that she will not use drugs
intravenously, and not undergo blood transfusion excepting of blood
obtained through a certified blood bank.
No woman may act as a surrogate more then thrice in her
lifetime.
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