Sperm donation is the fertility treatment of choice when achieving pregnancy with the intended father's semen is not possible, and also in cases of lesbian couples and single women, given the absence of a male partner.
Using donor sperm may also be interesting in cases where the intended father is a carrier of a genetic abnormality or disease, and does not want his children to inherit it, regardless of whether there exists a fertility problem or not.
Within Cyprus, sperm donation is allowed for carrying out both an intrauterine insemination (IUI) or an in vitro fertilization (IVF). The following article shall explain the requirements to undergo IVF with donor sperm in this country.
Every donor-sperm IVF procedure is comprised of the following phases:
Should the embryo transfer be scheduled for another cycle, the embryos will be frozen via embryo vitrification, and defrosted in the very moment at which the transfer is set. That is when the woman has to take hormone medications for endometrial preparation.
These are in short the fundamental steps involved in every donor-sperm IVF process. The duration time of each medication protocol may vary according to the characteristics of the patient, and each woman's own personal situation.
The legal framework that regulates sperm donation in Cyprus, and medically assisted reproduction (MAR) in general, is the Law 69(I)/2015, which establishes that sperm donation should be based upon anonymity and altruism.
This means, on the one hand, that donor identity will not be revealed to the intended parents, nor to the donor-conceived child. Neither donors will be given information on the recipients or the unborn child. Also, the selling of genetic material, that is, male reproductive cells, is forbidden.
However, donors are allowed by law to be financially compensated in recognition of the inconveniences causes, such as travel expenses and time off work.
In order for a candidate to be eligible for donating his sperm, he should be 45 years old or less, and being free from hereditary, genetic, and/or infectious conditions.
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