Council of Europe, Ad Hoc Committee of Experts on Bioethics,
Report on Human Artificial Procreation (Strasbourg: 1989).
I. Scope and definitions
The principles set out hereafter shall apply to the techniques
of human artificial procreation, in particular to artificial insemination,
to the methods involving the removal of ova such as in vitro fertilisation,
as well as methods that involve donation of semen, ova or embryos and to acts
and procedures on embryos made possible by these techniques.
For the purpose of the application of these principles:
- a. artificial insemination
- means the introduction of sperm into a woman's genital
tract by any means other than sexual intercourse;
- b. in vitro
fertilisation
- means the fusion of an instrumentally removed human ovum
with a spermatozoon induced in a culture vessel;
- c. embryo
- means the result of the fusion of human gametes at all
usages of development before the foetal stage;
- d. donor
- means a person, other than the surrogate mother, who provides
his/her gametes or an embryo for the benefit of another person;
- e. surrogate mother
- means a woman who carries a child for another person and
has agreed before pregnancy that the child should be handed over after birth
to that person.
II. General conditions
for the use of artificial procreation techniques
Principle
1
- The techniques of human artificial procreation may (subject
to the circumstances covered by paragraph 1 of Principle 7 below) be used for the
benefit of a heterosexual couple when appropriate conditions exist for ensuring
the well-being of the future child and only when:
a.
- other methods of treatment of fertility have failed
or are not appropriate in the particular case or offer no prospect of
success; or
- a serious risk exists of transmitting to the child a grave hereditary
disease; or
- there is a serious risk that a child would suffer from some other
disease which would result in his early death or severe handicap; and
b. there is a reasonable chance of success
and there is no significant risk of adversely affecting the health of
the mother or the child.
- The techniques of human artificial procreation must be not
used for obtaining particular characteristics in the future child, in particular
for the purpose of selecting the sex of the child except where, in conformity
with sub-paragraph a. of the preceding paragraph,
a serious hereditary disease linked with the sex is to be avoided.
Principle
2
Any act required by artificial procreation techniques and
procedures carried out on embryos and manipulations connected therewith must
be performed under the responsability of a physician and within an establishment
authorised by the competent authority of the state or an authority set up
by the state for that purpose.
Principle
3
No person may be compelled or required to take a direct part
in the performance of acts mentioned in the present principles to which he/she
has an objection on the grounds of conscience.
Principle
4
- The techniques of artificial procreation may be used only
if the persons concerned have given their free informed consent, explicitly
and in writing, in accordance with national requirements.
- Before obtaining such consent, the physician and the establishment
using the techniques of artificial procreation must ensure that the persons
concerned are given appropriate information and counselling about the possible
medical, legal, social and, where relevant, genetic implications of this treatment,
particularly, those which might affect the interests of the child to be born.
Principle
5
The physician and the establishment using the techniques of
artificial procreation shall make appropriate inquiries and investigations
in order to diagnose and to reduce the risk of transmission of a hereditary
or infectious disease, or any other factor which may present a danger to the
health of the woman or the future child.
Principle
6
The physician and the establishment using the techniques of
artificial procreation must keep records of any information needed in order
to fulfil or prove that they have fulfilled the obligations imposed upon them
under these principles.
III. Storage of
gametes and embryos
Principle
7
- A single person who is at risk of infertility or of another
hazard that may impair his or her future procreative capacity may deposit
his/her gametes for his or her own personal future use, provided that at the
time of the artificial procreation all the requirements set out in these principles
are fulfilled.
- Where a person who has deposited his/her gametes for his/her
own future use dies during the storage period or cannot be traced on the expiry
of that period, the deposited gametes shall not be used for artificial procreation.
- Gametes shall not be stored for a period longer than fixed
by national legislation or any other appropriate means.
- Artificial procreation with the semen of the deceased husband
or companion shall not be allowed.
Principle
8
- Only the minimum number of ova shall be fertilised as is
strictly necessary to ensure the success of the procreation.
- Embryos shall not be stored for a period longer than fixed
by national legislation or any other appropriate means.
- The destination of embryos stored for the use of a couple
for procreation but not used by term may be decided upon only with the consent
of both members of the couple.
IV. Donation of
gametes and embryos
Principle
9
- No profit shall be allowed for donations of ova, sperm, embryos
or any element collected from them. Only loss of earnings as well as travelling
and other expenses directly caused by the donation may be refunded to the
donor.
- A person or a public or private body which is authorised
to offer gametes for the purpose of artificial procreation or research shall
not gain any profit from such offer.
- Donations of gametes for artificial procreation shall not
be subject to any discriminatory conditions. The donor can, at any moment
before their use, require that his/her gametes shall not be used for the initially
intended purpose and give instructions about the use which should be made
of them.
Principle
10
The number of children born from the gametes of any one of
the donor shall be limited by national legislation or any appropriate means.
Principle
11
- In principle, in vitro fertilisation shall be effected
using gametes of the members of the couple. The same rule shall apply to any
other procedure that involves ova in vitro or embryos in vitro.
However, in exceptional cases defined by the member states, the use of gametes
of donors mays be permitted.
- The donation of embryos not used by a couple to another couple
for the purpose of artificial procreation may be allowed in exceptional cases
by member states.
Principle
12
The transfert of an embryo from the uterus of one woman to
the uterus of another shall not be allowed.
Principle
13
- The physician and the staff of the establishment using the
techniques of artificial procreation shall maintain the anonymity of the donor
and, subject to the requirements of the national law in legal proceedings,
shall keep secret the identity of the members of the couple as well as the
fact of artificial procreation. Where it is necessary in the interests of
the child's health or for the purpose of genetic counselling, information
on the genetic characteristics of the donor can be given.
- However, national law may provide that the child, at an appropriate
age, may have access to information relating to the manner of his or her conception
or even to the identity of the donor.
V. Determination
of maternity and paternity
Principle
14
- The woman who gave birth to the child is considered in law
as the mother.
- In case of utilisation of sperm of donor:
a. the mother's husband is considered
as the legimate father and, if he has consented to the artificial procreation,
he may not contest the legitimacy of the child on the grounds of artificial
procreation;
b. if the couple is not married, the
mother's companion who gave his consent cannot oppose the establishment
of parental responsibilities in relation of the child, unless he proves
that the child was not born as a result of a artificial procreation.
- Where the gametes donation is made through the intermediacy
of an authorised establishment, no filial relationship may be established
between the donor of the gametes and the child conceived as a result of artificial
procreation. No proceedings for maintenance may be brought against a donor
or by a donor against a child.
VI. Surrogate
motherhood
Principle
15
- No physician or establishment may use the techniques of artificial
procreation for the conception of a child carried by a surrogate mother.
- Any contract or agreement between surrogate mother and the
person or couple for whom she carried the child shall be unenforceable.
- Any action by an intermediary for the benefit of persons
concerned with surrogate motherhood as well as advertising relating thereto
shall be prohibited.
- However, states may, in exceptional cases fixed by their
national law, provide, while duly respecting paragraph 2 of this principle,
that a physician or an establishment may proceed to the fertilisation of a
surrogate mother by artificial procreation techniques, provided that:
a. the surrogate mother obtains no material
benefit from the operation;
b. the surrogate mother has the choice
at birth of keeping the child.
VII. Acts and
procedures carried out on embryos
Principle
16
The fertilisation of ova in vitro and the obtaining
of embryos by lavage shall not be permitted for research purposes.
Principle
17
- No act or procedure shall be permitted on any embryo in
vitro other than those intended for the benefit of the embryo and for
observational studies which do no harm to the embryo.
- When a state allows, in addition, investigate and experimental
procedures other than those mentioned in the preceding paragraph for a preventive,
diagnostic or therapeutic purpose for grave disease of embryos, it shall require
that the following conditions be fulfilled:
a. the purpose cannot be achieved by
any other method; and
b. the embryo shall not be used after
fourteen days from fertilisation, any period of storage by freezing or
by any other means not included; and
c. the consent of the couple has been
given according to paragraph 3 of Principle 8 and, if the embryo
has resulted from fertilisation in vitro using donor's gametes
their consent shall also be required; and
d. a properly constituted multidisciplinary ethical committee
has given its approval.
- The splitting of the cells of an embryo may be allowed by
member states only in order to use a part of it for diagnostic purpose if
it is designed to establish a serious illness or anomaly in the future child
and if conditions b, c and d mentioned in paragraph 2 above are satisfied.
Principle
18
The introduction into a woman's uterus of a human embryo which
has been subjected to any act or procedure other than those mentioned in paragraph
1 and 3 of the preceding principle
shall be prohibited.
Principle
19
Once it has been implanted, an embryo resulting from fertilisation
in vitro shall not undergo experimentation in utero.
Principle
20
The use of the techniques of artificial procreation to create
identical human beings by cloning or any other method shall be prohibited.
Principle
21
- The placing of an human embryo in the uterus of another species
or vice versa shall be prohibited.
- The fusion of human gamete with the gamete of another species
shall also be prohibited. The same apply to the fusion of embryos or other
procedure likely to produce a chimera.
- However, member states may allow the fusion of human and
animal gametes for investigation aimed at diagnosing infertility, provided
that the development of any resulting hybrid cells ends at the two-cell stage.
Home
|| Treaties
|| Search
|| Links