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January 5th, 2009 at January 5, 2009
Posted by webmaster in scaesar.com
  • I saw a news report last night about a woman who is routinely donating her eggs in order to help pay for the cost of raising her children and paying for nursing school. Apparently, many women are donating eggs nowadays to help make ends meet.
    Each egg can get you $7,000! That's a semester's tuition at my college! Would you ever do this?

    P.S. I'm not considering this. I just want to know what you think.


  • I hope you ladies don't mind me sticking my nose in here, but I thought you may want to read this:


    "The donation process is time-consuming, exposes the donor's body to massive doses of hormones and may have complications due to the extraction procedure. Ethicists worry the amount of money offered is coercive, and some researchers suspect repeat donations may increase long-term cancer risks.

    Egg brokers screen candidates for physical and psychological soundness before accepting them.

    The ideal candidate is a healthy non-smoker between the ages of 21 and 29, of average height and weight with no family history of disease. Sellers must commit to keeping at least eight doctor's appointments over a three-week period.

    Because they need the money, some young women "could conceal risk factors and unfavorable medical history in order to become candidates," said Hines.

    Potential sellers also may ignore health risks associated with egg donation, a concern that prompted the ethics committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine to warn against "excessive" payments of more than $5,000.

    The regimen for women who agree to sell eggs begins with seven to 14 days of injections with gonadotropin-releasing hormone. This causes the pituitary, the so-called master gland of the endocrine system, to halt the release of eggs by the ovaries.

    Once ovulation has shut down, a series of injections with a follicle-stimulating hormone triggers the development of several egg-containing follicles in the ovaries. During a woman's normal monthly cycle, only one follicle is stimulated at a time.

    An injection of human chorionic gonadotropin, known as hCG or the "trigger shot," triggers the final maturation of these eggs.

    It takes 36 hours after the trigger shot for the ovaries to swell. At this time donors return to the fertility clinic for extraction. A needle inserted through the wall of the vagina into the ovary collects the egg follicles. The hollow needle uses suction to remove the egg and liquid inside each follicle."

    Personally, I don't think I would do this. Health concerns and wondering what ever happened to my offspring.

    Ok, leaving now...



  • no problem at all in doing this...soo many women out there who cant conceive naturally and want babies of their own...so if u have a way to help them then why not?? its a great thg to do...whether for free...or for some money if u need it...but always be fully aware of the risks and what not...sometimes thgs like this are irreverseable and u gotta make wise choices for urself and ur body first..


  • If I needed the money sure.


  • in what state can you do it


  • Only if I was in circumstances so dire nothing else would do.

    The baby would have half of my genetic traits, and I would feel really weirded out not knowing anything about them.


  • err im not sure how this whole "donating eggs" work
    but if i do not have to like be "fertilized" by men[lol] but simply have the egg taken from my body ill say why not.
    as long as theres no complications of course







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