Thursday, June 28, 2012

Early menopause tied to higher heart disease risk Via @ Weecare Surrogacy USA

Women who go through menopause before age 46 are twice as likely to have a heart attack or stroke as women who hit menopause later, according to a new study.
"These are women who should keep in mind that they are at increased risk," said Dr. Melissa Wellons, the lead author of the study from the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
"My advice to them would be to get your traditional risk factors checked... and do the things that we know, based on evidence, can improve your risk of developing heart disease, like keep your cholesterol in check and keep your blood pressure in check," she told Reuters Health.

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Sunday, June 24, 2012

Gestational carrier bill gets to Christie Via @ Weecare Surrogacy USA

A law allowing women to carry donated eggs to term for infertile clients is now before Governor Christie.
"Gestational carriers," meaning women who agree to receive a fertilized embryo that is not her own and carry the child, currently operate legally in other states but advocates say such agreements are not legally enforceable in New Jersey.
A bill that passed the state Assembly Thursday would legalize those contracts. In return, arrangements between willing participants could be all-expenses-paid - covering carriers' full medical bills as well as housing, food and living expenses for the pregnancy.
Assemblywoman Valerie Vainieri Huttle, D-Englewood, sponsored the legislation, which passed with the 41 minimum required votes.
Opponents argue the change allows surrogacy - an issue that has been controversial in New Jersey since the state's highest court ruled that the mother of Baby M, a paid surrogate who changed her mind about giving up the baby, had not given up her maternal rights to the child.

Read more... http://www.northjersey.com/news/160164475_Gestational_carrier_bill_gets_to_Christie.html

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Saturday, June 9, 2012

Straight, Single Men, Wanting Kids, Turn to Surrogacy

At a lavish baby shower outside of Boston, there was no pregnant mom in sight. The diaper genie and burp cloths were for a 45-year-old middle school principal named Peter Gordon.
Gordon has been dating and searching for Ms. Right for more than two decades, but hasn't found a wife. Yet, he badly wanted to start a family.
"I'm still hopeful," he said. "Some people are lucky in love. I haven't found luck yet. It's not for lack of trying."
Steven Harris, a 57-year-old lawyer from New York, found himself in the same predicament. He knew he wanted kids but didn't have someone to have them with and said he felt a "profound sadness" about 15 years ago.
"I really felt like I really was missing something," he said.
So Gordon and Harris, both heterosexual bachelors, made the decision to become dads on their own through surrogacy, using their sperm and a donor egg.
Gordon said he tried adoption before surrogacy but kept getting turned away.
"I called five different agencies and every one of them told me that either I would not be considered or that I would be at the bottom of the list because I was a single father," he said.

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Read more...http://abcnews.go.com/US/straight-single-men-wanting-kids-turn-surrogacy/story?id=16520916

Monday, June 4, 2012

Newborn connects two continents

AUSTIN (KXAN) - A Pflugerville mother of four is the surrogate mom for a couple she's never met who live 10,000 miles away.

What do you do if you cannot conceive or perhaps carry a child through pregnancy? One option is adoption, but if you want your own blood kin, a surrogate mom may be the answer.

In western Australia, Jenny and Steve Suleski lost their third child during pregnancy, and Jenny was told she could not carry another.

By destiny or luck, the couple had a fertilized embryo in storage. Because of Australia's stringent surrogate laws, they looked abroad. Through an agency their search led them to a Pflugerville woman named Christi.

"We did a lot of research, America's a really good place to go for surrogacy," said Jenny Suleski. "Christi was in Texas, and Texas is great for us because the laws are very friendly."

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Read more..http://www.kxan.com/dpp/news/local/austin/newborn-connects-two-continents