12 May 2009
Last week BioNews reported that, speaking to The Sunday Times, an HFEA (Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority) spokesperson said that mistakes due to human error only occur in 0.5 per cent of cases. BioNews has since been informed by the HFEA that this figure was misquoted in the newspaper, and that the true figure for IVF mistakes is 0.04 per cent.
RELATED ARTICLES FROM THE BIONEWS ARCHIVE
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20 September 2010 - by Ben Jones |
A Canadian doctor is being sued by two of his patients who discovered their children were not genetically related to the believed donors, reports the Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail... |
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2 November 2009 - by Ailsa Stevens |
A mistake at one of London's top fertility clinics has resulted in more than 11 women being treated with genetically abnormal sperm, according to an exposé published in the Independent on Sunday newspaper this week. If passed on, the chromosomal abnormality carried by the sperm could have triggered miscarriages or resulted in the birth of a child with serious chromosomal disorder.... |
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28 September 2009 - by Ailsa Stevens |
A woman from the US has given birth to another couple's baby after being implanted with the wrong embryo during her IVF treatment. Caroline Savage and her husband, Sean found out about the mistake when the clinic rang Mr Savage in February. But rather than abort the pregnancy, as the clinic suggested, the couple have elected to give the child back to its biological parents after the birth.... |