04 July 2017

Tolerasm grows stronger

Trans women can get the opportunity to give birth to children

Anna Stavina, XX2 century, according to the Daily Mail: Wombs for men: Astonishing prospect as fertility doctors back operations on NHS so transgender women born as boys can have babies

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Haydeno Crosso from Gloucester, a former Pageau, last year suspended the process of restoring the floor (as his shift should be called in a tolerastic way - VM) in order to get pregnant.

According to leading experts of the National Health Service (NHS, the British medical care system), in the next decade transsexual women born with a male body will receive artificial uterus. And therefore, the opportunity to give birth to children.

Reproduction experts from the UK say that this procedure for patients who identify themselves as women should be funded by taxpayers – on the basis of "equality enshrined in law."

The debate on this controversial issue is being led by medical ethics lawyer Dr. Amel Algrani from the University of Liverpool. The lawyer insists on discussing whether the implantation of the uterus to trans women should be funded by the state.

Dr. Algrani predicts that the successful implementation of this idea may lead to the fact that others may require implantation of the uterus – for example, gay and heterosexual men who want to experience the "joys" of bearing a child.

Critics of the project believe that the NHS should not waste precious resources to allow trans women to get a "real female experience."

Women's rights activist Laura Perrins says: "Most taxpayers will consider this an inappropriate use of funds. This will raise moral and ethical issues directly related to women's rights. This encroaches on the meaning of motherhood and being a woman."

Nevertheless, gynecologists are increasingly asserting the opinion that implantation of a donor uterus into the body of a man born to a man is quite possible and can enter clinical practice in ten years. Confidence that this event is approaching is inspired by the fact that successful uterus transplants have recently been carried out to women born without this organ. At least five children have already been born thanks to uterus transplantation operations performed at the University of Gothenburg.

Later this year, British doctors hope to launch their own charity-funded program to transplant donor wombs to at least three British women.

The amazing success of Swedish surgeons from Gothenburg led to the fact that trans women also began to express a desire to implant uterus more often.

And now some doctors from the British NHS have supported their demands. Gynecologist Arianna D'Angelo from the Wales Institute of Reproductive Health (Wales Fertility Institute) said that "from an ethical point of view" it would be fair.

She stated: "We already have deferred parenthood programs for transgender people so that they have the opportunity to have a child with their genes."

Dr. Francoise Shelfield (Francoise Shelfield), teacher of Obstetrics and Gynecology Department in University College London, which has been treating infertility for 30 years, spoke in support of D'Angelo: "I don't see how this program differs from the opportunity to give birth to my own child. Since we are talking about equality and we have laws [protecting the rights of transgender people], I don't see what could prevent this."

While doctors are sharing their opinions, the first British transsexual who became pregnant Hayden Cross is approaching childbirth. Hayden Cross from Gloucester was born in a female body, and his parents named him Paige. Last year, Cross suspended the process of gender reassignment (a politically correct term now used to describe sex reassignment) in order to get pregnant from a donor's sperm found on the Internet.

Professor Steven Weyers from Ghent University Hospital is planning to start a uterus transplant program this year, in which 20 women will participate. According to Weyers, implantation of the uterus to trans women will be possible "in about ten years."

Dr. Algrani, Director of the Department of Medical Law and Regulation (Health Law & Regulation Unit) University of Liverpool, as well as a lawyer of the highest rank, describes his position in the journal of Law and the Biosciences (Journal of Law and the Biosciences). In the publication, the lawyer states that, since a uterus transplant has become available to women, "there will definitely be questions whether this procedure should not be funded by the state for trans women as well." According to Algrani, "this will revolutionize reproduction."

The precedent is theoretically capable of leading to the fact that other people, including heterosexual men, may require a uterus transplant, "which will allow couples to share the hardships and joys of pregnancy." She also says: "Both homosexual couples and single men may want this, so as not to resort to surrogacy."

Portal "Eternal youth" http://vechnayamolodost.ru  04.07.2017


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