Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Outsourcing Pregnancy

It’s now ‘pregnancy outsourcing’ that is on the rise in India. Childless couples and singles, especially from the US, Europe and Southeast Asia are looking to India with the hope of becoming parents.

There are others like working women who don’t have the time or can’t afford to become mothers or who simply don’t want to go through the physical changes and health issues that come with getting pregnant. But they strongly want to have babies.

Single women and men are also finding surrogacy the best way to have their own children with the help of either a donated sperm or egg, as the case may require.
Indian surrogate mothers are in big demand. The requirements are simple: A surrogate must not be over 45 years and should test negative to life-threatening and genetic diseases including HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis B & C and thalassemia.
There’s money to be had, it’s for a short-term period and there is the satisfaction of bringing happiness to someone’s life.

The downside is that surrogacy is a largely unregulated sector and the rights of these women remain unprotected.
Many country ban to do outsourcing   pregnancy but  In same country like they  increasing outsourcing   revenue specially in India its going very  popularity day by day. I am going to mention one of the town name in Gujrat. Its very popular for paid pregnancy also  chipper as well but on the other  hand  paid pregnancy its very   highly demand and expensive in European Country or United state the cost about 17 thousand or 18 thousand dollar. In Indian surrogacy made by only 5 thousand or maximum 7 thousand dollar.


India is home to a booming, multi-million dollar, unregulated surrogacy industry, in which couples can hire an Indian woman to carry their child via in vitro fertilization—using the either the couple's own sperm and egg or donor sperm and egg—for less than a quarter of what it costs to for the same services in the U.S.

The town of Anand is considered the "hub" of India's surrogacy business. One clinic there—run by Dr. Nayana Patel, who has helped deliver babies for over 200 American couples—requires surrogates to live in a hostel for their entire pregnancy so they can be monitored. Dr. Patel's facility was was profiled by CBS News; footage shows small, crowded rooms packed with rows of single bed-sized cots, some of them holding two pregnant women at a time, while hallways are lined with women eating their meals on the floor. They are cut off from their families for the duration of their stay.

Of the $25,000 price tag that Americans pay for a pregnancy, only $8000 goes to the surrogate for her 40 weeks on the job. But it beats the $30 a month that one woman at the clinic was making as a housekeeper.

So we are basically now living in a dystopian future in which the ruling class is farming people in an impoverished environment. This is The Handmaid's Tale come to life.

That said, it does seem to be advantageous for everyone involved. A couple can get a baby for relatively cheap, while the surrogate will earn a relatively significant amount of money—enough to change her life or that of her own children

 Most important thing in that case that there are most women are under 25/30 age. 
Most  concern able thing that those people are  thinking its a one kind  of business and  its increasing with  highly rate. Because people have outsourcing business.
You will be more surprised to hear that, according to London  Evening standard  London daily newspaper every 48  hours a child  delivering from paid surrogacy  for  family in United states, united kingdom Germany and any other country.

Now I am going to show you why Indian people are very interested about paid pregnancy, that means outsourcing pregnancy.  Few months ago DECCAN HERALD publish a  report  and they showed a family they are involving on  this outsourcing pregnancy.  


In this  repost its has been  Claire that most of  people are doing it because of money crisis.
 Dutta may have opted to become a surrogate to satisfy her maternal instincts, but for Preeti Singh (name changed) from Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, surrogacy was a way to address her poverty.

She delivered a child for a British couple in September last year. Six months on, she came to the IVF Research Centre again to donate her eggs that fetched her Rs 25,000. Now she is thinking of going for surrogacy once again to ease her economic pressures and secure her children’s future.

Thirty-year-old Preeti has two children. Her husband is a DRIVER and earns Rs 2,500 a month. “It was difficult to put two meals a day on the table for the family,” she explains.
Her life changed after she delivered the surrogate baby. The payment she received took care of all her immediate needs. “Our worry about getting the next meal for our children was solved immediately. Later, we built two small rooms, bought a bike and put some money in the bank,” Preeti says with a smile.

For Preeti, the money (Rs 3,50,000) was a dream come true. But for someone coming from the US or UK, this sum is a fraction of what they would have to pay to hire a surrogate in their own country.
That kind of family are  going up day by day. Because within short time a women earning .lots of money.



Analysis and  report BYMD SAIDUR RAHMAN 






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