Women Are Happy To Be A Donor Egg.
Most women who give out as egg donors take on a positive take on their experience a year later, redesigned research indicates. Researchers polled 75 egg donors at the time of egg retrieval and one year later, and found that the women remained happy, honourable and carefree about their experience. "Up until now we've known that donors are by and strapping very satisfied by their experience when it takes place," said read lead author Andrea M Braverman, director of complementary and alternative medicine at Reproductive Medicine Associates of New Jersey in Morristown. "And now we usher that for the vast majority the doctrinaire experience persists".
Braverman and colleagues from the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in Piscataway, NJ, were scheduled to largesse their survey findings Wednesday in Denver at a meeting of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine. A year after donation, the women said they rarely worried about either the health or fervent well-being of the children they helped to spawn. They said they only think about the donation occasionally and on rare occasions discuss it.
The donors also reported that financial compensation was not the number-one motive for facilitating another woman's pregnancy. Rather, a after to help others achieve their dreams was pegged as the driving force, followed by paper money and feeling good.
Women who said the donation process made them feel worthwhile tended to be unagreed to the notion of meeting their offspring when they reach adulthood. And most donors were receptive to the design of meeting the egg recipients and participating in a donor registry.