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ashish, Indian Sperm Donor in Bhopal, India

Name
ashish
Member Type
Sperm Donor
Country
India
Region/State
Bhopal
Hair Color
Black
Eye Color
Amber
Age
Date Registered
1 year ago
Profile Updated
1 year ago
Last Login
1 year ago
Messages Sent
0
Messages Received
0

Sperm Donor from Bhopal, India.

Im Willing to Help Couples of
Heterosexual Couple, Single Woman

Number of Children (non-donor)

Nationality

Race

Religion

Languages

My Health is

My Education is

I am a Smoker

I Have a Passport
No

Willing to Travel
Yes

Blood Type

Height

Weight

Has been a sperm donor before
Yes

Marital Status

Why I want to be a sperm donor:

o help single women or couples (heterosexual or same sex) who cannot conceive naturally.It is an opportunity to give back and provide a service for someone. have seen firsthand the joy a new child can bring to a family and they would like to help women or couples who are unable to achieve a pregnancy. They would like to help others enjoy parenthood as much as they have (donors with children). To help women and couples unable to bear children; to add something new to their life. To make a difference in the world.Some people would like to leave at least a “footprint” on the earth. Giving is a good thing to do. A friend’s recommendation.It is an easy way to help others and further medical research. Because of the shortage of donors at SDA. It is a good cause. By becoming a sperm donor I become an part of an exceptional group of men who have chosen to help others in fulfilling their dreams of having a family.

Description of myself:

I am a young man .having good quality of sperm .I can provide sperm for every age female that want to become pregnant .If they would like to recieve naturally due to genuine reason of their partner I can provide services in natural way too.

My letter to intended parents:

The use of third-party reproduction has been practiced for over a century.1 With the advancement of assisted reproductive technologies in recent years, the market for assisted reproduction has increased with many individuals and couples turning to third party donors to receive gametes.2 Depending on the process used to procure the donated gamete, the recipient may or may not know the identity of the donor.3 To receive donor gametes, recipients have the option of using agencies or clinics, close friends or relatives, or even complete strangers located through advertisements in publications or online.4 While minimally regulated, obtaining donor gametes through traditional clinics and sperm banks requires some protocol; in contrast, “buying sperm over the internet … is not much different than buying shoes. One of the first documented cases of donor insemination occurred in *** when a married couple struggling with male infertility consulted Dr.William Pancoast, a physician and medical school professor.6 Without obtaining the couple’s consent or informing them of what he was going to do, Dr.Pancoast anesthetized the wife and inseminated her with the sperm of the “best looking member of the [medical school] class.”7 The procedure resulted in a successful pregnancy and subsequent birth.8 Although the husband was eventually informed of the procedure, the wife was never told that her husband was not the biological father of the child.9 Although artificial insemination in humans was possible in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, it was not socially acceptable and women undergoing the procedure were often considered to have committed adultery and their children were perceived as illegitimate.10 In the *** states such as Georgia and California began to recognize donor-conceived children as legitimate, and in *** the Uniform Parentage Act (UPA), a model statute that may be adopted on a state-by-state basis, recognized the paternity of husbands who consented to their wives’ artificial insemination.11 As first promulgated in *** the UPA addressed artificial insemination only in the context of married couples.12 The husband rather than the sperm donor was legally recognized as the natural father of a child conceived through artificial insemination so long as three conditions were met: the artificial insemination was conducted under a physician’s supervision; the husband gave his written consent; and the physician filed the consent with the state health department.13 By *** thirty states had adopted the UPA or a similar statute, with fifteen states eliminating the requirement that the procedure be supervised by a licensed physician.14

India
Bhopal
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