If the same person who donated eggs carries the baby, she is called your surrogate. If you use your own eggs or embryo, then the woman who bears the child is called a gestational carrier. Surrogacy is one of the most expensive ART procedures. Generally, assisted reproductive technologies can range from several thousand dollars to tens of thousands of dollars for a gestational carrier using your frozen embryos. Before you get too deep into your decision-making about how far you'd go to have a baby, it would be best to check with your insurance carrier about how much of the cost of these methods is covered. There are several legal and ethical issues that surround surrogacy, some are, in a surrogate situation, the gestational mother is the woman who carries the baby to term. This can be a very taxing process both physically and emotionally and unique in that after the surrogate mother physically carries the baby throughout the pregnancy, she needs to physically and emotionally detach herself from the child once it is born. Because the gestational mother will not likely be the child's primary caretaker, there could be legal questions that arise in terms of what – if any – involvement she will have with the child once born. There are also ethical considerations that are brought to mind in terms of informing the child of his or her surrogate mother, as doing so may have an effect on the child's self-identity. In addition, there is also the factor of surrogate mother compensation. It is typically expected that the intended parents of the child will reimburse the surrogate mother for her medical and other related expenses. This can include a dollar amount for her hospitalization as well as incidentals such as her maternity clothing, meals, and other similar costs that she may be out during her
If the same person who donated eggs carries the baby, she is called your surrogate. If you use your own eggs or embryo, then the woman who bears the child is called a gestational carrier. Surrogacy is one of the most expensive ART procedures. Generally, assisted reproductive technologies can range from several thousand dollars to tens of thousands of dollars for a gestational carrier using your frozen embryos. Before you get too deep into your decision-making about how far you'd go to have a baby, it would be best to check with your insurance carrier about how much of the cost of these methods is covered. There are several legal and ethical issues that surround surrogacy, some are, in a surrogate situation, the gestational mother is the woman who carries the baby to term. This can be a very taxing process both physically and emotionally and unique in that after the surrogate mother physically carries the baby throughout the pregnancy, she needs to physically and emotionally detach herself from the child once it is born. Because the gestational mother will not likely be the child's primary caretaker, there could be legal questions that arise in terms of what – if any – involvement she will have with the child once born. There are also ethical considerations that are brought to mind in terms of informing the child of his or her surrogate mother, as doing so may have an effect on the child's self-identity. In addition, there is also the factor of surrogate mother compensation. It is typically expected that the intended parents of the child will reimburse the surrogate mother for her medical and other related expenses. This can include a dollar amount for her hospitalization as well as incidentals such as her maternity clothing, meals, and other similar costs that she may be out during her