#2021-1017Law on Bioethics
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The bioethics law in France establishes protocols for assisted reproductive technologies, emphasizing non-discrimination based on marital status or sexual orientation. It allows couples and single women access to medical assistance for procreation while ensuring informed consent and detailing procedures for embryo handling and donor anonymity. Additionally, the law mandates access to donor information for offspring once they reach adulthood.
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Key Changes
- Expanded access to assisted reproductive technology for single women and same-sex couples.
- Established rules for embryo handling and donor anonymity ensuring privacy.
- Mandated access to donor information for children conceived through assisted reproduction upon reaching adulthood.
Obligations
What this law requires
Provide access to medical assistance for procreation to all couples (man-woman or woman-woman) and single women without discrimination based on marital status or sexual orientation
Obtain prior written consent from both members of a couple or single woman before performing artificial insemination or embryo transfer
Conduct mandatory preliminary interviews with patients using a multidisciplinary medical team including at least one psychiatrist, psychologist, or nurse with psychiatric competence before implementing assisted reproductive technology
Verify patient motivation, conduct medical evaluation, and provide complete information on success rates, failure rates, side effects, short and long-term risks, and constraints of assisted reproductive technology procedures
Limit the number of in vitro fertilized oocytes to what is strictly necessary for success of the assisted reproductive procedure, considering medical techniques being used