Pride Angel at Manchester Pride's Lifestyle Expo

August 28, 2010 21:13 by PrideAngelAdmin
Erika and Karen Pride Angel Manchester Pride's Lifetyle Expo started today with great success, thankfully the rain did not dampen any spirits, with hundreds of visitors attending the variety of stalls. Pride Angel were happy to be one of those stalls and gave advice to those interested in becoming parents through donor conception or co-parenting.

Pride Erika and Karen the co-founders of Pride Angel said 'We are so happy by the positive response we are getting about this valuable service, there are alot of really genuine people coming forward to offer support by donating sperm or eggs to help others'

Pride Angel had many visitors with questions being answered about donor conception, using fertility clinics, gay couples co-parenting, egg donation and legal rights of donors to name but a few.

Erika and Karen will be available at Manchester Pride's Expo this Sunday and bank holiday Monday and will be happy to answer any questions.

Visit Pride Angel at www.prideangel.com

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Shouldn't donors donate for 'altruism' rather than reward?

August 26, 2010 17:29 by PrideAngelAdmin
donor baby Many men and women who long for a baby - but are beset by fertility problems - will read with envy the news that Samantha Cameron has given birth to a baby girl and say a silent prayer that they too will be so blessed.

Yet the fact remains that, in many cases, their prayers will not be answered because of a chronic shortage in the number of people willing to donate eggs or sperm to help them conceive.

This week's announcement that the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) will review its policy on paying sperm and egg donors raises, yet again, the issue of how we reconcile questions of need, knowledge and ethics.

In my view, the review is no bad thing. Sometimes we have to go back to the drawing board, if only to decide the first design was the best one. I firmly believe we should not pay people to be donors.

Let's be clear what this is about. One in seven couples has fertility problems, causing untold heartache. They have planned the nursery in their dreams and watched their friends completing their lives with children, but have to face the news that it won't be so easy - if at all possible - for them.

After trying in vain, they seek advice, and all the time the clock is ticking, especially as women are leaving it later to start attempting to conceive. They may seek IVF, at which point they may discover that the problem is within one of them, in terms of producing eggs or sperm.

So they turn to the idea of donation. Yet some fertility clinics have waiting lists of up to two years, because of the shortage of donated eggs and sperm. That is why some couples go abroad as 'fertility tourists' to get what they need. Or even buy sperm over the internet.

Needless to say, the HFEA is worried about this situation, which would almost certainly be improved by paying donors. At the moment that is banned; the altruistic men and women who donate are rewarded with £250 to cover loss of earnings.

But in Spain donors get £740 for each cycle of eggs and there is no shortage of women coming forward. So what would happen if the ceiling were to be raised?

Donors could be paid thousands for eggs and sperm, as in America where good looks in donors are coveted. What a tawdry transaction it would be - for wannabe parents to fork out a fortune for donor services, insisting on a blue- eyed girl or athletic boy or a donor with a PhD. It hardly bears thinking about. Yet it could happen, which is why experts like Mr Tony Rutherford, chairman of the British Fertility Society, are worried

After all, he argues, if financial gain became the principle inducement, why not pay the going rate?

It raises the disturbing prospect of people selling their eggs and sperm as they might a used car or old table on eBay. Yet we are talking about babies, little human beings.

At the centre of any debate stands that truth: this is not about commodities, but people.

believe the dignity of parents, donors and the unborn would be threatened by introducing marketplace values.

The HFEA website advises: 'To donate can be a life-changing decision. Understand your rights, responsibilities and the implications of this altruistic act.'

There we have it - enshrined (for now) at the heart of the HFEA's purpose. Altruism is a selfless concern for the well-being of others. It doesn't ask: 'What's in it for me?'

'Isn't the answer not to increase the reward but to increase the altruism?' It focuses on doing good - the highest aim a human being can have. Altruism is mistrusted by cynics, but never fails to lift the heart. Can there be a gene for altruism?

If so, it would please me, as a parent, to know that my child had inherited it. Given all the heart-ache involved with fertility treatment, one shining light has been the selfless generosity of anonymous men and women who want to use their good fortune (as fertile beings) to help those who are not. That's a motivation beyond price.

Other issues will be involved in the HFEA's review, leading to a three-month public consultation that will start in January (to take part, email donationreview@hfea.gov.uk).

One change might be to allow donated sperm to be used to start up to 20 families, rather than the current limit of ten. But that would not be needed if there were more donors.

Isn't the answer not to increase the reward but to increase the altruism? To me, £250 does seem too low and to double the amount would not be unreasonable in the current economic climate.

But what if the HFEA also began a skilful marketing campaign to encourage donors? I believe that not enough young people know how to go about being a donor and what is involved.

They might not understand their right to anonymity, for example - in April 2005 sperm and egg donors lost their right to this.

It's not beyond the HFEA to set that matter straight and spread the word that donation is a marvellous thing to do. Let the authority weigh up all the issues - but then, I hope, conclude that it has had the principle right all along.

Article: by Bell Mooney 26th August 2010 www.dailymail.co.uk

Considering donating sperm or eggs? looking for a donor? Read more at www.prideangel.com

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Egg donors could get up to £800 in payments

August 24, 2010 19:39 by PrideAngelAdmin
egg donor Currently the Human Fertility and Embryology Authority (HFEA) imposes a £250 cap on payments so as to avoid commercialising the procedure.

But the low payment is thought to be behind a shortage in egg and sperm donation which is driving infertile women and men to overseas – often unregulated – clinics, according to research.

Now the HFEA is considering adopting the Spanish system which would see the payment cap lifted to £800.

"We want to review egg donation," Professor Lisa Jardine, the chair of the HFEA told the Sunday Times.

"We are suggesting moving closer to the Spanish system. But there is no suggestion of adopting the US model where a good-looking girl with a degree can get $30,000 (£19,000) for her eggs."

A report will go to the HFEA's executive next month, setting out the proposed higher payments.

It will then be put out to public consultation.

Fertility clinics are barred from offering straight payments for egg or sperm donation.

Even though egg donors can face invasive procedures and some health risks, they are entitled to a maximum "compensation"of only £250 for loss of earnings, plus expenses.

There are fears that raising the payments could commercialise egg and sperm harvesting, undermining the principle of donation on which the current system is based.

Anthony Rutherford, a consultant at the NHS Leeds Centre for Reproductive Medicine and chairman of the British Fertility Society, said: "Women who donate eggs have to undergo consultations, medical investigations, a course of injections and a small operation.

"That is a lot to go through and £250 is not enough. However, there is a balance to be struck. If you allow payments that are too high then the principle of donation is lost."

Estimates of the number of British women travelling abroad for fertility treatment range from the high hundreds to the low thousands.

The main destinations include Spain, the Czech Republic and America. Others stay in Britain and reach private agreements with egg donors, thus avoiding official scrutiny.

The HFEA says it has reports of women being given £20,000 cars or having their credit card debts paid off.

One in six couples suffer from infertility problems in Britain. About 37,000 women underwent in-vitro fertilisation treatment here last year. About 2,000 babies are born in Britain each year using donated sperm, eggs or embryos.

The number of women registered as egg donors has risen slightly from 946 in 1998 to 1,150 now. The real problem is that the number of women wanting fertility treatment has risen much faster than this.

Read more about egg donation and the HFEA

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Surrogacy: We went from nought to three children in a year

August 22, 2010 21:54 by PrideAngelAdmin
surrogacy After her hopes of getting pregnant were crushed, Caroline Van Den Heever turned to surrogacy to keep alive her dream of starting a family

My house is full of noise and activity – shouting, laughter and colourful paintings pinned to the noticeboard. Not so long ago, it was deathly quiet and I hated it. That was before my husband Jan and I had our three amazing children, born through surrogacy and egg donation in a journey that took us across the world and to the limits of our emotions.

The number of babies born to surrogates is relatively small, given the thousands of women desperate to become mothers. ‘Each year, there are just 50 to 70 surrogate pregnancies in the UK,’ says Sabreena Mahroof, secretary of Surrogacy UK. ‘Others are undergone by women abroad for couples in the UK: we don’t know how many live births those amount to, but it is thought there are currently about 750 surrogate children in the UK.’ Surrogacy, where another woman carries the baby for the one who will become its mother, is used when a medical condition makes it impossible or dangerous to get pregnant and give birth, such as after repeated IVF failure, or cancer treatment, or because of a heart condition. ‘Surrogacy is the last resort,’ says Sabreena. ‘You have to prove through your GP that you have tried everything else, because we can’t risk a surrogate’s life by putting her through a pregnancy unnecessarily.’

When I met my husband Jan in 1998, I knew I wanted children with him, but it wasn’t until we’d been trying for several years that it became apparent that I was going to need to borrow another woman’s womb. As it turned out, I needed to use another woman’s eggs, too. We married in August 2000 (Jan is a quantity surveyor and I was an IT account manager for a bank) and as we were both 38, we tried for children straight away. But by November 2001 we still hadn’t conceived, and eventually tests revealed that my infertility – along with the painful periods I’d suffered from all my adult life – was caused by severe endometriosis, which meant pregnancy was unlikely without IVF and might not happen even then. Giving up the prospect of your own children is like a bereavement. Everyone I knew seemed to end up with their own genetic child I was turning 40 the week I got the diagnosis, and I felt empty and old. I had always thought I’d have lots of children: now I might have none. I was silent as Jan drove us home. He stopped to get some groceries and when he returned to the car he gave me a box with a heart necklace in it. This gesture said, ‘I love you and we will get through this together’ more than words ever could. We had three rounds of IVF in 2003, but they didn’t work because I was producing low numbers of poor-quality eggs. I was exhausted, and I didn’t know if I could face more unsuccessful cycles. We did some serious soul-searching and admitted with immense sadness that it was time to stop trying to use my eggs and womb, and consider other options.

Giving up the prospect of your own children is like a bereavement. Everyone I knew – even friends having IVF – seemed to end up with their own genetic child and here I was, turning my back on that. I felt devastated when I saw mums pushing prams, and I couldn’t attend a christening without feeling bereft. However, my drive to be a mother was too strong to give up. We couldn’t stop yet.

I started to look into adoption and surrogacy, talking to people and scouring the internet for information. The turning point came at Christmas in 2003. Jan is from South Africa, and we were visiting his parents in Cape Town when Jan’s mum showed us a magazine article about a family friend who’d had a child via a surrogate through a local clinic. We’d already looked into doing it in the UK, but we wanted to use a separate donor and surrogate (to avoid the risk of the surrogate becoming too attached to her own genetic child to give it up) and at that time very few UK clinics would work with a surrogate and an egg donor together, because surrogacy in the UK isn’t bound by law, but based on trust, so there’s a high risk of legal issues.

‘It’s a kind of gentleman’s agreement,’ says Sabreena, ‘which is why we emphasise the importance of developing the relationship between surrogate and commissioning parent.’ But the birth mother may still decide to keep the child in the end, whereas in South Africa lawyers are involved and the commissioning parent has more rights. We could also work with a social worker to manage the whole process for us. Within days we’d contacted the South African clinic and before we flew home, we’d seen specialists and contacted a social worker called Wilna who would help us find a surrogate and egg donors. We returned to the UK with hope.

I pored over lists of egg donors, looking for information about their personalities and examining pictures of them as children (the only pictures you’re allowed to see in an otherwise anonymous process). We finally found one that seemed suitable, and in May 2004 we got a call from Wilna saying she’d found us a surrogate. We flew out to meet her in July and it was the strangest meeting: I felt I had to try to impress her, to convince her to lend us her womb, even though we’d be paying her expenses. She agreed to do it, and we thought, ‘This is it – we’re going to be parents.’

But this is where we discovered that surrogate pregnancies are as vulnerable as any other to medical problems and the uncertainties of IVF. We had five IVF attempts with this surrogate, using fresh eggs from three different donors and Jan’s sperm, but each time the embryos failed to implant and we finally accepted that her womb wasn’t going to work for us.

By now, we’d paid for a total of eight IVF attempts. Every penny we could earn, save or put on the mortgage was going towards this. There w ere no holidays, no expensive dinners – we made cutbacks everywhere to finance our dream of a family. Then we heard that Wilna had found us another surrogate – Bronwyn, a 24-year-old single mum. This time our first attempt led to a positive test. The pregnancy didn’t last more than a day or two, but the intense elation Jan and I experienced for that short time was ground-breaking. We realised that even if it took 20 attempts, we’d do it.

My heart bursts with love for my children. They are a product of both nature and nurture

Read more: www.dailymail.co.uk

Article: 21st August 2010 dailymail.co.uk

Read more about surrogacy and egg donation

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Manchester Pride 2010 begins with Fringe festival

August 20, 2010 22:03 by PrideAngelAdmin
Manchester Pride Manchester Pride 2010 began today with a Fringe festival of comedy, art, theatre and sport.

More than 40 events will be held in 20 venues ahead of the Big Weekend, which starts next Friday.

The Big Weekend will feature acts such as Kelis, Beverly Knight and Belinda Carlisle and includes the annual pride march through the city centre.

Coronation Street cast and crew will mark the soap's 50th birthday at the parade.

The festival will close on Bank Holiday Monday with a candlelit vigil at Sackville Park.

Festival director Jackie Crozier said: “I can’t believe that Manchester Pride 2010 is officially upon us. We have so much going on this year, from our new ‘Welcome to my World’ exhibition to Kelis performing on the main stage. I would like to take this opportunity to wish everyone a safe and happy Pride.”

Tickets for the Big Weekend cost £17.50 and are available from Manchester Pride's website or at venues across the city.

Read more about Manchester Pride's festival, parade, mainstage and Lifestyle Expo at www.prideangel.com

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Sisters are doing it for themselves: Fertility Road Feature

August 18, 2010 23:28 by PrideAngelAdmin
lesbian family Having a child is the most natural thing in the world. In an ideal scenario, it’s a situation born of love, commitment and the desire to procreate. But what if the usual trappings of that romantic impulse to give life aren’t available to you?

To put it into context, The UK Adoption and Children Act 2002 gave same-sex couples the right to jointly adopt children, and in the same year the English Court of Appeal judged that a same-sex couple could be seen to be “living together as husband and wife”.

The Civil Partnership Act was passed in 2004 and the Human Fertilisation and Embryology (HFE) Act 1990 was revised in2008. The new HFE Act gives lesbian couples who conceive using licensed donor sperm increased legal recognition in law, replacing the 1990 wording of “father” with “supportive parenting”. Under the new act, if a woman is in a civil partnership at the time of the treatment, then “the other party to the civil partnership is to be treated as a parent of the child”. If a woman is not in a civil partnership at the time she obtains donor sperm but has a partner who gives consent to the treatment, the non-birth mother is automatically treated as a parent of the child.

So while there is clarity in some areas, for lesbian parents who conceive using natural methods, the law makes it very much more complicated. The donor is legally considered the child’s father and if he is named on the birth certificate, has parental responsibility. If he is not named he is still legally considered the father and can apply to court for that aforementioned parental control.

Gay men wanting to father children can opt for the surrogacy route (see next issue for a more in-depth article). In this case the surrogate’s own eggs are used or those of an egg donor can be fertilised. Surrogacy is legal in the UK but it’s still illegal to advertise and make money from it (bar expenses). There is the added complication that the surrogate is able to change her mind at any time making it a stressful and potentially heartbreaking experience for the male donor.

Many gay men opt to donate sperm to a single woman or lesbian couple and then play an active role in the child raising. If a man donates to an anonymous recipient through a fertility clinic there are no legal or financial obligations to the child but it will be able to trace its biological father when it is 18.

If a man donates privately, this option is at the discretion of all parties. Dr Petra Nordqvist is a post-doctoral research fellow at the University of Manchester Morgan Centre for the Study of Relationships and Personal Life in the Department of Sociology. She interviewed 25 lesbian couples with experiences of when it is 18. clinical and/or self-arranged donor conception in England and Wales, at various stages of the conception process (from thinking about it to being pregnant). She found what she calls “an irresolvable tension” between the couples’ conception practices using donor sperm, and their romantic desire to be a nuclear family.

Says Dr Nordqvist, “Clinical conception is difficult in itself to negotiate, but non-clinical conception is far worse. Couples who cannot negotiate access to clinics – for example, because they cannot afford it – have to resolve a whole range of issues in order to get access to donor sperm, not least legal ones. “Such couples have to, for example, consider where to find a donor, who they want as a donor, if they want an involved father, how to do it, if they can trust him, and also if he is sexually healthy. These experiences are actually quite common but far from how most people imagine conception to be like.” How couples resolve these issues is complex.

Of Dr Nordqvist’s sample, 23 were actively trying or had already conceived. Twelve went to clinics and 11 were doing self-arranged conception. “What’s important,” says Dr Nordqvist, “is that the boundaries were fluid. Some started the non-clinic route and then a few years down the line they swapped. The law change made a difference so they became more willing to go to a clinic, for example.” She adds, “Often this was because the hurdles proved incommensurable. For example, they could no longer afford the clinic treatment and this had so far been unsuccessful, or relations with donors would break down – for example because he had a new partner or wanted to be more involved with the child than was previously agreed.”

Melissa Smith (not part of the study) is from London, 41, and in a long-term lesbian relationship. She had her children, Raphael (6) at the age of 34 and Gabriel (3) at 37.

“I have always known that I wanted children,” she told Fertility Road. “When I first met my partner, Rani, 12 years ago, I was already feeling ready to start a family, but she persuaded me to wait a while so that we could enjoy some freedom first. I began seriously trying to get pregnant at 31.” There was no possibility of Rani being the birth mother as she had already passed through menopause so the choice of birth mother was an easy one. Says Melissa, “We first of all began to try to conceive with Rani’s brother’s sperm, but this involved expensive trips to Malaysia and was very complex and fraught, so in the end we decided to use an anonymous donor (at that time this was possible in the UK).” Says Melissa, “Neither of us wanted to risk a sperm donor who could have any claim whatsoever on the child, so we were quite happy with this option, although it was not our preferred one.”

“Often couples want a donor who looks similar to them. Research revealed how important looks and resemblance are in family ‘connectivity.”

One of the overriding findings of Dr Nordqvist’s research was that the couples wanted donors not dads. She says, “A very important driving force for the couples through the whole process was their desire to have a child together and to be parents of that child. This meant that most couples saw the donor as a donor and not as a dad.”

A lot of the women Dr Nordqvist spoke to initially went to friends first: “They said, ‘what men do we have around us?’. Even if they didn’t talk to them about it at first they thought about them for some time.”

Forty-year-old Heather and her partner Jane (not part of the study) decided they wanted a strong family resemblance so they asked Jane’s brother if he would be a donor. He agreed and they made arrangements. Eventually, he met a new partner who decided she was unhappy with the idea and it was back to the drawing board. Eventually Jane and Heather gave up on the idea as they didn’t want to go down the clinical route. “It just got too traumatic,” says Jane, “and we couldn’t see how we could do it properly.”

For some of them it did work – either finding someone who wanted to be a dad or wanted to donate but not have any involvement. Some would even get to the point where they had spoken to solicitors in order to tease out how the relationship would work. When it broke down, it broke down in different ways. Says Dr Nordqvist, “Cases were different. Sometimes the donor had a new sexual partner who wasn’t keen. In another case the donor moved away and they all became uncomfortable with meeting up every month. When you have to do it every month the practicalities can get difficult.”

In another case, a couple had used a friend who wasn’t going to be the dad. But he then changed his mind and decided he did want legal responsibility.

Usually, says Dr Nordqvist, the couples wanted someone with a family already, where possible. “If the donor was going to be the dad this was less important,” adding, “then it became about how trustworthy he was. A sort of ‘If he’s already got kids then he’s doing it for different reasons…’ reasoning.”

Dr Nordqvist found that her couples chose a donor really quite carefully and that they considered the donor’s physical appearance to be of great importance. She says, “Often the couples want a donor who looks similar to them. My research threw some interesting light on how important looks and resemblance are in family ‘connectivity.’”

Melissa adds, “The clinic was quite firm that we should use a sperm donor who was as close to Rani in profile as possible. We had no objection to that, and in fact Rani was even keen for the donor to be Hindu and not Muslim. Again, at that time there was no great shortage of Indian sperm donors, though now it is quite a different story.”

Melissa and Rani tried with one donor with the help of IVF and she conceived but miscarried at four months. They then chose a different donor and she conceived straight away with no fertility drugs whatsoever, just IUI (intrauterine insemination).

Melissa and Rani know very little about their children’s ‘donor daddy’ (as they call him) – just his height, hair colour, eye colour, ethnic origin and religion, as well as a tiny thumbnail sketch about his interests and skills. But, she adds, “We know he was an engineering student and my eldest son is already showing promise in that field. So the father’s personality legacy lives on.”

Other donor issues studied by Dr Nordqvist include the nuts and bolts of the insemination: “How does she gain access to donor sperm over time (since she may not conceive on the first attempt)? How does she find a place to do the insemination? How does she feel about preparing the semen sample, the bodily fluid of a probable stranger?

“How do they feel?” Says Dr Nordqvist, “The way in which they receive a donation has a lot to say about how they perceive their intimacy,” adding, “What I found fascinating was how they constructed being a couple as they conceived. It wasn’t just anyone who could inseminate the birth mother but always the non-birth mother (if they were doing it themselves). And they would go together to the clinic if it was IVF.”

Eleven of the women Dr Nordqvist spoke to self-arrange their conception. She reports, “There was one case where the donor agreed he would be very much on the side and as they got more into it, it transpired that he wanted it to be a bit cosier than they did…”

Additionally, she says, “The couples told me that there was a great distinction between having sex and doing the insemination. This was very important to them and they had differing views from some of the potential donors.”

Every stage of the process was managed by the couples. “From the way the donor moved in the house to how he would donate the sperm. Some of the couples made sure the donor was in the toilet not in the bedroom, for example, or that he was upstairs while they were downstairs. One couple even went out so one of the donors could have more privacy.”

Many of the couples Dr Nordqvist spoke to had planned to alternate birth mothers, though, she says, “Some had no desire to be pregnant at all.”

Says Dr Nordqvist, “Lesbian conception practices go against conventional understandings of reproduction so lesbian couples who want to become parents together find themselves in a position where their route to conception is uncertain. It is unclear whether they can pursue donor conception as a couple, what conception methods are available to them, how they can access donor sperm, and if and how their parenthood and family will be recognised.”

Smith agrees, “Rani wondered if she would feel bonded to the child if she was not biologically related to it. Time has proven that to be utterly irrelevant to her. She could not be more bonded if they were stuck together with superglue!”

The idea of family was very important to all of Dr Nordqvist’s respondents. She says, “Those ‘family’ links were made in different ways. Many felt it was important to resemble each other and therefore chose a donor who looked like them, others made sure they were civilly partnered or had the same last name.”

Melissa and Rani stored sperm from the same donor to use for a second pregnancy. Says Melissa, “We were allowed to use this sperm after the law change, as donor sperm was exempt if siblings had already been born from anonymous sperm.” Again, Melissa conceived immediately, and Gabriel was born on their fifth anniversary. Melissa now offers advice on fertility, pregnancy, parenting and legal support for gay and lesbian couples and parents, through her consultancy Making Families.

The lesbian fertility landscape is still a tricky one to navigate but, says Melissa, it’s changing. “We didn’t encounter hostility from the fertility clinics, but at that point they were all still approaching lesbians as if they were infertile, which was of course not the case.”

“Clinics are more aware of the issues that may be different for lesbians and there are even some clinics who deliberately court lesbian clientele”

She adds, “I feel that they encouraged lesbians to take heavy courses of fertility drugs very early in their treatment, without giving their bodies a chance to try without for a while. This has changed a little now, though I still feel they are a bit pushy with the interventions. Most clinics are more aware of the issues that may be different for lesbians and there are even some clinics who deliberately court lesbian clientele, probably as they have realised that there are profits, as well as babies, to be made from the lesbian fertility market.”

For qualified information and advice on same-sex parenting why not head to www.prideangel.com Founded by scientists Erika and Karen, Pride Angel is an independent connection service, committed to helping single, lesbian, gay and infertile couples become parents through donor conception and co-parenting.

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Marriage is the gold standard for gay couples

August 16, 2010 21:46 by PrideAngelAdmin
gay marriage It's a common refrain of politicians (and some lobby groups) to say that while they are not against equal civil marriage, it is not clear how many gay people actually want it.

A poll by pinknews.co.uk - conducted over two days with almost 800 responses – shows otherwise. LGBT people demand marriage equality.

They see Argentina, Mexico City and other countries in Europe making the move and question why the UK – a supposed world leader on LGBT rights – hasn't yet got that far.

PinkNews.co.uk has said time and again that civil partnerships were an excellent and much-needed addition to UK law, giving gay couples access to the same rights and benefits as heterosexual couples, plus protection and dignity. However, our readers don't believe in 'separate but equal'.

Things are changing fast and they need to. We have a Tory-led government which has said it will consider the case for equal marriage, while the majority (if not all) of the Labour leadership contenders support changing the law. Next month, the Liberal Democrat party is expected to pass a motion cementing its pro-gay marriage policy.

Stonewall's excellent work on persuading politicians to support religious civil partnerships is to be commended but liberal faith groups such as the Quakers and the Metropolitan Community Church now wish to carry out marriages. They see a difference between the two, as do the gay couples who have no interest in faith and want a civil marriage.

Only five of the 786 people who answered the survey preferred faiths being given the option of holding civil partnerships over marriage. Denying rights to a minority because a small number within it disagree is not a reason for not passing legislation.

Another issue, which affects smaller numbers of people, is the cruelty of forcing trans men and women to divorce their partners in order to be legally recognised in their new gender. A country which values marriage should never allow this to happen.

Our poll did not, for reasons of time, ask why respondents want gay marriage. But here are some past remarks from our readers:

"Relegating an entire group of people to a different category in order to get similar rights is nothing more than morally unjust and legal segregation under a different name. It is wrong."

"Moral disapproval alone is an improper basis on which to deny rights to gay men and lesbians. The UK government has failed to provide a rational basis for singling out gay men and lesbians for denial of a marriage licence."

"To ban gay marriage in a modern society goes against the British ideas of fair play and equality."

"Marriage is the ultimate equality issue for lesbian and gay people. It makes us equally valued people, and our sexuality equal too."

Those who argue that "traditional marriage" must be protected won't be dealt with in this column. Instead, we urge them to set their sights on banning divorce.

But those who say that gay people do not want to marry are wrong. As for those who argue that there's no difference in law; that may be true. But words matter. For those who want their relationships recognised in law, marriage is the gold standard.

Article: 12th August 2010 www.pinknews.co.uk

Read more about gay parenting options at www.prideangel.com

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Stress DOES reduce your chances of getting pregnant

August 12, 2010 23:15 by PrideAngelAdmin
pregnancy test High stress levels can damage a woman's chances of getting pregnant, researchers warn. Those who are anxious are 12 per cent less likely to conceive during their fertile time than those who stay calm. It is the first proof that stress makes it less likely a woman will fall pregnant, despite long-standing anecdotal evidence that being relaxed can improve the chances.

Although the fall in success rates appears small, experts claim it can make a big difference to older women trying to have a baby when their fertility is naturally declining because of age.

In a study at Oxford University and the U.S. National Institutes of Health, blood levels of a marker for a stress hormone called alphaamylase were consistently higher in women who had trouble conceiving.

Dr Cecilia Pyper, from the National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit at Oxford University, said: 'This is the first study to find that a biological measure of stress is associated with a woman's chances of becoming pregnant-that month.

'We found that those women with high levels of a marker for stress were less likely to succeed in conceiving. 'The findings support the idea that couples should aim to stay as relaxed as they can about trying for a baby.

'In some people's cases, it might be relevant to look at relaxation techniques, counselling and even approaches like yoga and meditation. 'Many couples are very keen to know what they should do to improve their chances of conceiving and having a healthy baby, and this will help us provide the best advice.'

The researchers, who published their findings in the journal Fertility and Sterility, carried out saliva tests on 274 women aged 18 and 40 who were all planning pregnancy but not tried for more than three months.

They analysed levels of the stress hormone cortisol and the enzyme alpha-amylase, which is a marker for adrenalin - the 'fight or flight' hormone. Researchers carried out the tests on day six of each woman's menstrual cycle for a total of six cycles or until the woman fell pregnant. They used fertility monitors to identify ovulation and confirmed the pregnancies with testing kits.

The study found no effect from cortisol on the chances of falling pregnant. But women in the group with the highest levels of alpha-amylase had a 12 per cent lower chance of becoming pregnant for each day of their most fertile days than those with the lowest levels of alpha-amylase.

The researchers said: 'Irrespective of the day or frequency of sexual intercourse during the fertile window, women with higher concentrations of alpha-amylse were less likely to conceive than women with lower concentrations.

'Stress significantly reduced the probability of conception each day during the fertile window.' Dr Pyper said it was unclear how the stress hormone affected fertility, although it might reduce blood flow in the fallopian tubes which could affect transportation of the egg or sperm.

She said previous research appears to have focused on the stress hormone cortisol, rather than alpha-amylase, which may explain why it has been difficult to prove a link with fertility chances until now.

'The difference in your chances of getting pregnant could be important to older women in their late 30s trying for a first baby, or even a second or third child, at a time when their fertility is declining because of their age and it all takes longer,' she added. Dr Pyper said women were highly likely to benefit from relaxation techniques, particularly as such therapies had been shown to improve IVF pregnancy rates.

Leading fertility specialist Dr Allan Pacey described the findings as 'intriguing'. 'It's important for women to relax when they are trying to have a baby, but it's easier said than done,' he said. 'My advice to couples is to throw away the fertility charts and don't make trying for a baby a chore - it will stress you both out.'

Article: 12th August 2010 www.dailymail.co.uk

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Jennifer Aniston says 'women no longer need a man in order to have a child.'

August 10, 2010 13:46 by PrideAngelAdmin
Jennifer AnistonIn her latest film, The Switch, the 41-year-old actress plays a single woman who uses a sperm donor to get pregnant.

"Women are realising it more and more - knowing that they don't have to settle with a man just to have that child," Aniston said.

"Times have changed and what is amazing is that we do have so many options these days, as opposed to our parents' days when you can't have children because you have waited too long.

"The point of the movie is: what is it that defines a family? It isn't necessarily the traditional mother, father, two children and a dog named Spot.

"Love is love and family is what is around you and who is in your immediate sphere. That is what I love about this movie. It is saying it is not the traditional sort of stereotype of what we have been taught as a society of what family is."

Since divorcing Brad Pitt in 2005, the public has been fixated by Aniston's single status.

Asked if she still hoped to become a mother, the Friends actress replied: "Yeah, I have said it years before and I still say it today." But she laughed off a question about whether she would resort to the "turkey baster" method like Kassie, her character in the film.

"I don't have plans on that, no," she said.

Aniston was speaking at a press conference in Los Angeles to promote The Switch, which co-stars Jason Bateman.

Article: 9th August 2010 www.telegraph.co.uk

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Jennifer Aniston: searches for a sperm donor in her new movie 'The Switch'

August 8, 2010 14:28 by PrideAngelAdmin
Jennifer Aniston Jennifer Aniston plays a wannabe mother who undergoes artificial insemination, using what she believes is the perfect donor's sperm, to get pregnant.

And when it comes to off screen it seems Aniston would allow life to imitate art, insisting that if she ever went that route she too would definitely 'wanna know the guy'.

Aniston revealed her preference during an appearance on Jay Leno's Tonight Show, in Los Angeles.

In The Switch, Aniston plays singleton Kassie who is desperate to have a baby. Ignoring the objections of her best friend, Wally (played by Jason Bateman) she decides to go it alone.

Kassie chooses a handsome and charming donor but before she can complete the act of insemination, unbeknown to her, a drunk Wally swaps the sperm for his own.

The switch isn’t discovered until seven years later when he finally meets her precocious, though slightly neurotic, son.

Aniston has talked about her desire to be a mother one day, telling Entertainment Weekly 'I'm on the verge of it in some way...it's something I long for.'

But when it comes to how the single star plans on accomplishing her dream, she's keeping decidedly mum. Leno asked Aniston if she would ever take a page from The Switch and 'just go down the bank' to get pregnant?

'Jeeze that question has never been asked to me,' she deadpanned. 'You go to the bank and you have a card...I honestly don't know exactly.'

'The Switch' is to be released nationwide on 3rd September 2010.

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