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Suzi Leather: 'It's the relationship's quality that counts,
not people's sex'
Interview: Head of fertility
watchdog says writing fathers out of the rules will extend the
chance of treatment to all women
The
Independent, UK, By Jeremy Laurance, Health Editor, January
21, 2004
In the
two years since she was appointed chair of the Human
Fertilization and Embryology Authority (HFEA), Suzi Leather
has stood firm against the mavericks in the fertility business
who believe doctors should be free to offer whatever treatment
they think fit to anyone who walks into their consulting
rooms.
She has declared a ban on sex selection and limited the number
of embryos transferred to the womb to a maximum of two in
women under 40, to reduce the incidence of multiple births.
She has demonstrated her compassion for the infertile and now
wants to see tougher measures to protect children born through
IVF.
But Ms Leather's proposal to write fathers out of the Human
Fertilization and Embryology Act is bound to be seen in some
quarters as a capitulation to public pressure. She argues that
it is a principled move about extending the opportunity of
treatment to all women, regardless of their partnership
status. More than a decade has passed since the 1990 Act
became law, and times have changed. Then, legislators wanted
to ensure that no category of woman was excluded from
treatment, but also felt they should manage the sense of moral
unease about helping single and lesbian women to become
mothers.
Many clinics took the view that treatment should be limited to
heterosexual couples living in long-term relationships. But as
the years have passed, the number of single-parent families
has grown and an increasing number of clinics have offered
treatment to single and lesbian women. Today the clause
limiting treatment to women who can find a man is not only
outmoded, but unfair, Ms Leather said.
"My personal view is that there should be more equal access to
fertility treatment. I don't think single and lesbian women
should be excluded solely on those grounds [that there is no
father]. There are certain circumstances in which children can
grow up happy and well parented in the absence of a man. It is
the quality of the relationship that matters not that a man or
a woman are involved," she said.
Ms Leather, 47, knows the pull of motherhood and its pressures
- she has three teenage children. She is emphatic that she is
not saying men are superfluous - only that it is wrong to
discriminate against women who do not have one. "I think
having two parents is better than one, largely on energy
grounds. It is also nice to have someone to share the
enjoyment," she said.
But she dismisses arguments that fatherless children are more
prone to educational failure and delinquency, saying stress
can be caused in many ways - poverty, unhappy relationships,
living on a crime-ridden estate - and may be translated to
children. "Delinquency cannot just be put down to children
being brought up by women on their own," she said.
She was born in Uganda, the daughter of a psychosexual
counsellor, and studied politics at the University of Exeter,
training later in probation and social work. She describes
herself as a Christian Socialist and has been a committed
member of the Labour Party. She served on numerous committees
and public bodies before coming to national attention as
deputy chairman of the Food Standards Agency before being
appointed to the HFEA in March 2002.
Ms Leather succeeded in injecting new purpose, as well as a
dose of glamour, into what had become an inward-looking,
nervous body, frightened of confronting clinics and reluctant
to engage with the public. She has taken on a big task -
rewriting Britain's 13-year-old fertility law.
The review began last year and has already identified ways in
which the law has failed to keep pace with advances in science
and the development of new treatments, such as sperm sorting
for sex selection.
Today it will move to an examination of the welfare of the
child provisions where changes are also badly needed, she
said. There is, for example, no requirement for clinics to
check whether applicants for treatment are on the paedophile
register or have convictions against children. There is also,
she said, a need to protect patients from experimental
treatment that harm a child's positive self-image - such as
using eggs from an aborted fetus to conceive it.
No maximum age is set for patients by the authority, which is
left to clinics to decide, but this will be examined in the
review. Ms Leather said: "Clinics set their own limits and
many are very reluctant to treat women above 45. They will
look at each case on its merits but, personally, I do
seriously question whether it is right to treat women in their
fifties and sixties. I don't think fertility treatment is
there to everlastingly push against the barrier of the
menopause."
Although the authority banned sex selection after a
consultation exercise showed the public overwhelmingly against
it, the decision was pragmatic rather than principled. Current
methods are risky and unreliable, but if the technique was
refined, it could become acceptable. "I can't rule out that
our view might change as the science advances," she said.
Since taking up her post at the HFEA, she says she has become
more aware of the suffering caused by infertility. But at the
same time she is anxious to challenge the orthodoxy that every
woman must be a mother: "You can be a perfectly happy human
being living a full life without being a parent." She pauses
before adding: "Although being a parent is the central
fulfillment of my life. It is part of what we seem to be
programmed for."
2003 Independent
Digital (UK) Ltd
click here for link
You may also want to read
Fathers no longer required: Fertility chief signals an IVF
revolution
The Independent, UK, By Jeremy Laurance, Health Editor,
January 21, 2004
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