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Dr. Soumya Ramesh's Profile
Success Rates of Surrogacy in India and Egg Donor IVF Program
Today Surrogacy now grew to become a great boom for anyone couples and singles who are yearning to make a child but cannot attain naturally. Every married couple would die to enjoy parenthood by having kids because children make every day living special. On the other hand, there are enough of those who can not enjoy the thrill of parenthood that brings fulfillment to their marriage.

Surrogacy or Surrogate refers to alternate or a substitute. In medical terminology, surrogacy indicates an arrangement whereby a woman agrees to undergo the pregnancy, labor, and delivery for another individual who either cannot through artificial insemination or surgical implantation of a fertilized ovum or embryo.

Commercial surrogacy is legal in India, as recognized by the Supreme Court of India in 2002.Now we can say that India is one among the emerging country as a leader in international surrogacy and fertility. Indian surrogates have been increasingly popular with fertile couples in industrialized nations because of the relatively low cost. Indian clinics are at the same time becoming more competitive, not just in the pricing, but in the hiring and retention of Indian females as surrogates.

Success rates of Surrogacy in India

According to the 2007 reports of society for assisted reproductive technology the India’s surrogacy clinics likely delivered 150 successful gestational pregnancies (with both patients and donor oocytes). This makes India the second most common location for gestational surrogacy. India has special clinics in gestational surrogacy with very good and well experienced doctors.

Surrogacy in India Whose main focus is to guide Intended Parents through every detail of the process for surrogacy. The goal and intensity behind this is to make each parent feel confident that every aspect of the process was being managed for them, and the overwhelming stress usually associated with Surrogacy in general was removed from the experience. What ever may be the reason or a constrain may be it is financial, legal, immigration, travel, or medical issues that Intended Parents had to contend with; these issues are no longer going to keep anyone from their dream of beginning a family. Surrogacy Abroad, Inc. goal with each Intended Parent is to exceed their every expectation while guiding them toward fulfilling their dream of parenthood.

Types of surrogacy:

•Traditional: Oocytes (eggs) from a donor are retrieved using traditional IVF-ET techniques, are fertilized from the husband's sperm and placed in the recipient’s uterus. In traditional surrogacy, the recipient is the mother that will raise the child.

•Gestational: Oocytes (eggs) from the biological mother are retrieved using traditional IVF-ET techniques, are fertilized with the husband's sperm, and are placed in the carrier's uterus. The carrier is also known as the gestational surrogate.

•Gestational with egg donor: This is very common for gay male couples, as they seek both a gestational surrogate and an egg donor.

In general Oocytes from younger women possess greater fertility potential, so if you are using a donor egg, the Egg Donors age is one of the most major factors for a successful birth.Surrogacy in India and IVF clinic India clinics state success rates close to 50%.

Surrogacy Abroad at Rotunda Clinic offers Egg IVF Program

Surrogacy had made life easy and very good option for the people who cannot conceive. This is a wonderful treatment option for older women and women with ovarian failure. They have work with experienced and internationally trained IVF and Surrogacy specialist Gynae doctors and hospitals in India. The success rates for IVF treatment and Surrogacy is 5 - 15 % higher than those in the other countries.

Our Egg Donor program attracts the best and the brightest Egg Donors and surrogate mothers because we have built our reputation on high quality, exceptional candidates. We also offer a full service surrogacy program to help you find a gestational carrier. Intended parents living abroad can benefit from their international surrogates program.

We encourage the intended parents to submit their query with their medical details and clinical details. We will revert to your query within 2-3 working days. Our Surrogacy Program manager will get in touch with you personally to discuss the case and provide you with a personalized medical quote.

Whether it is financial,legal, immigration, travel or medical issues that Intended Parents had to contend with; these issues are no longer going to keep anyone from their dream of beginning a family.

Our business is about people helping people to make families every day.We have helped no of couples including [lgbt]lesbian and gay couples and even single men and single women to fulfill their dream of enjoying parenthood.

Surrogacy Abroad at Rotunda Clinic is specialized in Gestational Surrogacy in India to people of all nationalities. All couples including lesbian and gay couples and even single men and single women can avail this facility to fulfill their dream of enjoying parenthood.The main intension behind Surrogacy Abroad at Rotunda clinic is to make complete process of Surrogacy smoothly and emotionally rewarding as possible.

Now everyone can have baby, Everyone can Start Creating Families,Through Surrogacy and be a proud parent today by contacting us and Please fill in your details on their websites at http://www.surrogacymumbai.com or http://www.rotunda.co.in or http://www.iwannagetpregnant.com or simply a phone call at +91 22 2655 2000 or +91 22 26405000

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Surrogacy in India and Indian Surrogacy Laws
A law to regulate India’s multi-billion dollar assisted reproduction industry has been in the works for some time. The draft Assisted Reproductive Technologies Regulation Bill-2010 will be presented to Parliament this winter, and even many inside the ART industry are eager to see it come to fruition. The first-of-its-kind Bill to control and monitor cases of surrogacy in the country has been drafted by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare,along with the Indian Council for Medical Research (ICMR) and has been sent to the law
ministry for approval.

India has become a major destination for foreign couples to hire surrogates to bear their children. This has been made possible by the legalization of commercial surrogacy in India in 2002. It has also been facilitated by the lack of stringent laws on surrogacy India and its low cost in the country. While surrogacy in the US may cost around $50,000 to $100,000, it costs only around $ 25,000 in India. Besides, India offers advanced medical care facilities and the added advantage is that most doctors speak English and can communicate well with foreign couples. In fact, commercial surrogacy in India is all set to become a $2.3 billion-worth industry. Couples, including gay and lesbian couples, from all over the world, have benefited from the surrogacy options available in the country.

India may have been a booming center of ‘reproductive tourism’ for several years, but it took the complicated case of Japanese baby Manji — born to an Indian surrogate mother — to bring into relief the fact that the law hasn’t managed to catch up with the burgeoning
baby industry. But this is set to change now, with India set to be the only country in the world to legalize commercial surrogacy. The proposed rent-a-womb law, if passed in the parliamentary session, will clearly be one of the friendliest laws on surrogacy in the
world.

India's booming, and much publicized, surrogacy industry may soon feel the effects of significant regulatory developments. The 35-page bill seeks to regulate India's heavily market-driven fertility industry, and introduces a number of policies ranging from clinic regulation to restrictions on ART access.

Some points that are worth noticeable in Indian Surrogacy Bill ,which the bill formally includes are:

1) Surrogacy shall not be available to "patients for whom it would normally be possible to carry a baby to term."

2) Surrogacy contracts shall be legally enforceable.

3) Married women need their husband's consent in order to become a surrogate.

4) Surrogates shall not undergo embryo transfer more than three times for the same couple.

5) Egg donor identities shall remain strictly confidential.

6) There shall be a detailed accreditation process for fertility clinics and gamete donor banks.

7) The Department of Health Research shall establish and manage a "national ART registry."

8) The only "couples" eligible for ART shall be those "having a sexual relationship that is legal in India." (This would
apparently exclude gay couples.)

9) Foreigners seeking surrogacy services must provide written proof that their home country "permits surrogacy, and the child born through surrogacy in India, will be permitted entry in the country." (This would apparently exclude people from Canada and a number of European countries that specifically prohibit commercial surrogacy, and could exclude people from countries that don't explicitly permit it.)

10) The bill also calls for the formation of both national and state advisory boards composed of Health Department workers,
industry representatives, scientists, and other civil society members. These boards are charged with operational zing and
enforcing the many guidelines enumerated in the bill.

11) The ICMR's ART Bill, 2010, has put in place several important provisions.It says a woman acting as a surrogate mother in
India cannot be less than 21 years or over 35 years. Also, she cannot give more than five live births, including her own
children.

12) The Bill mandates the appointment of a local guardian in case of surrogacy arrangements where the intended couple is staying outside India. This local guardian will be legally obliged to take delivery of the child born of the surrogacy arrangement if the intended couple does not do so.

It is yet unclear to what extent the 2010 bill's language, and more importantly, its interpretation, implementation and enforcement if passed will address these and other social justice and health concerns. The implications for reproductive tourism are undoubtedly huge, and will certainly be shaped by the forthcoming responses from international commercial ART/surrogacy agencies, rights groups, and other civil society voices.

The finalized bill's implications for certain groups, especially LGBT communities and foreigners seeking surrogacy in India, are turning heads already. Depending on how its rules on surrogacy are interpreted and enforced, the legislation would disqualify gay couples, both foreign and domestic, as well as individuals or couples from countries such as the UK, Canada and Germany where the practice of commercial surrogacy is illegal. Such steps in India, the commercial epicenter of what has turned into a global business,would drastically affect the global politics of reproduction "for hire."

The Future of Indian Laws on Surrogacy India and Gay Couples.

Indian laws on surrogacy are not clear. However, as the government plans to pass the Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART)
bill, this uncertainty will change. The ART bill will regulate In-Vitro Fertilization (IVF) and exclude gay couples from hiring surrogates in India. This is because the government of India has not legalized gay relationships, although it has been decriminalized by the Delhi High Court. Further, surrogacy for gay couples will be an option only after the country legalizes gay relationships. The bill also provides for prohibiting IVF clinics from conducting surrogacy transactions.Instead, it plans to set up special ART banks that will track reproductive donors and surrogate mothers.

The bill’s stipulations about who is eligible to use assisted reproductive services are also problematic. It states that ARTs will be available to all married or unmarried couples as well as single people, but defines “couple” as two persons “having a sexual relationship that is legal in India,”where homosexuality has been decriminalized but not legalized. “Married” and “unmarried” couples are also defined as those in marriages or relationships that are legal in the country where they are citizens. Accordingly the ambiguous language makes it unclear whether assisted reproductive technologies would be available for gay couples, and particularly for Indian gay couples.

As the world's media seems intent on declaring that forthcoming legislation in India will effectively ban gay couples from becoming parents through surrogacy, the question arises as to exactly what foundation these claims have. Drafts of the Assisted Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Bill 2010, which has been in process since 2008 and includes recommendations dating as far back as 2005, have thus far not explicitly stated one way or another whether gay couples will be eligible under the proposed rules.

Thus from these concepts we can only draw the conclusion that a gay couple may fall short of the requirements of being a
"couple" for the purposes of this Bill, but may be acknowledged as being married, or unmarried depending on their legal
status in their home country. In fact it would seem that in adding these more specific references to types of relationships or relationship status that are legal in countries other than India, that there is an increased possibility for gay couples to be eligible for surrogacy under the terms of what may become the new laws that govern this area of medicine.

The Bill therefore makes no specific stipulations about gay couples entering in to a surrogacy agreement, apart from their being generally eligible as one of the defined groups from Section 32 (1). Furthermore, both individuals who make up the "commissioning" couple must be party to the legally binding contract that will be drawn up.

Unless specific changes are made during the passing of this Bill, it is difficult to see how the current content will preclude or prejudice gay couples.

The ART bill also provides that foreign couples obtain a document from their embassy stating that the surrogate child will be granted the countries citizenship. This document is a must-have for securing a surrogacy agreement with any ART clinic. The clause, however, may hinder the prospects for couples coming from countries that do not recognize surrogacy.

Regardless of how the bill moves forward, there is an ongoing boon in the Art industry and commercial surrogacy in India.

Becoming a proud parent with the help of Third Party Reproduction involves a considerable financial and emotional investment. The surrogacy treatment cost is very economical in India as compared to the cost involved in European countries. The best medical facility and the use of latest technology in the treatment aided by renowned team of doctors and the well trained clinic staff has made India the favorable spot among the foreigners for surrogacy journey.

Rotunda offers surrogacy to people of all nationalities. We are an LGBT friendly clinic and offer surrogacy services to same sex couples. We also offer surrogacy to single parents. We believe in one simple principle, to provide our clients with the highest standard of care in the surrogacy and egg donation industry at an affordable price.

Enjoy the most awaited journey of parenthood with Rotunda Fertility clinic or You can contact for further assistance at
http://surrogacymumbai.com or http://www.rotundaivf.com or http://www.iwannagetpregnant.com or email at
surrogacymumbai.india@gmail.com or simply a phone call at +91 22 2655 2000 or +91 22 26405000.

All Appointments are scheduled according to your convenience at Rotunda ,the best Surrogacy Clinic in India and Top Surrogacy Program.

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