San Marino to treat Italy's IVF patients
Independent, The (London), Sep 15, 2004 by Peter Popham
THE TINY republic of San Marino, near Italy's Adriatic coast, is to benefit from Italy's draconian new rules on in vitro fertilisation (IVF).
Legislation passed in March saw Italy change from being one of the most permissive countries in Europe for IVF to one of the most restrictive.
Under Italy's new law, only heterosexual couples in stable relationships can apply for the treatment. Clinics can only produce three embryos per couple.
This greatly reduces the chances of an infertile woman conceiving and if she does conceive, it increases the risk of the baby being deformed.
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One of the specialists signed up by the clinic, Francesco Fiorentino, director of Rome's Genome Centre, told Corriere della Sera newspaper: "It's useless to pretend we don't know. The selection of embryos prior to implanting is the only safe way to prevent a terrible illness, and is a certain way of avoiding the necessity of a sad abortion."
But the long waiting list at a clinic yet to open is partly because of the fact that treatment at the centre costs about the same as in Italy before the law changed - around EUR2,500 to EUR3,000 per couple - and a fraction of what "fertility tourists" must pay further afield.
Copyright 2004 Independent Newspapers UK Limited
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