(August
28, 2017 – Washington, DC)
Gestational surrogacy, when a woman carries a baby in her womb for others, is
harmful to mothers and children, according to an amicus curiae (“friend
of the court”) brief filed by the Thomas More Society in the United States
Supreme Court. The filing was on behalf of five medical ethics advocacy
organizations: the American Association of Pro-Life
Obstetricians & Gynecologists, the Charlotte Lozier Institute, the National
Catholic Bioethics Center, the National Association of Catholic Nurses – U.S.A,
and the Catholic Medical Association.
The brief, which was filed by the
Thomas More Society in the California surrogacy dispute M.C. v. C.M.,
highlights an array of troubling medical issues brought about through
surrogacy. The petitioning organizations describe a voluminous and ever-growing
body of medical research showing that surrogacy poses serious medical risks to
both surrogate mothers and the children they carry.
Key concerns addressed in the filing
include:
- Surrogate birthmothers endure even
greater physical burdens than pregnant women who conceive spontaneously.
- Infants conceived by surrogacy are at
higher risk of adverse outcomes and fetal anomalies than infants conceived
spontaneously.
- Multiple embryo transfers increase the
risks to infants conceived by in-vitro
fertilization.
- Children conceived by in-vitro
fertilization have higher rates of birth defects, genetic disorders, and
other anomalies.
- Severance of the maternal-child bond harms both mother and child.
Thomas More Society Special Counsel
Sarah Pitlyk explained that, in addition to the physical health risks for the
gestational mother and child, the practice of surrogacy has grave effects on
society. “Surrogacy diminishes respect for motherhood and the unique
mother-child bond, encourages exploitation of women, and it commodifies
pregnancy and children,” she shared, adding that, “Surrogacy also weakens
society’s natural abhorrence of eugenic abortion.”
Pitlyk stated, “Any medical practice
that exploits and commodifies vulnerable members of the human family is of
concern to our client organizations and their membership. They share the common
goal of ensuring that the medical profession promotes human dignity and adheres
to its foundational commitment to ‘do no harm.’”
Read the Amicus Curiae Brief
submitted August 25, 2017, to the United
States Supreme Court by the Thomas More Society on behalf of the American
Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians & Gynecologists, the Charlotte Lozier
Institute, the National Catholic Bioethics Center, the National Association of
Catholic Nurses – U.S.A., and the Catholic Medical Association here.
The Thomas More
Society is a national not-for-profit law
firm dedicated to restoring respect in law for life, family, and religious
liberty. Headquartered in Chicago and Omaha, the Thomas More Society fosters
support for these causes by providing high quality pro bono legal services from
local trial courts all the way up to the United States Supreme Court. For more
information, visit http://www.thomasmoresociety.org/.
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