Sperm bank to be set up in Tokyo for donors ready to disclose identity
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Sperm bank to be set up in Tokyo for donors ready to disclose identity

Visitors are silhouetted at an observation deck of Azabudai Hills in Tokyo, Japan, on April 26, 2024. (Photo: Reuters)
Visitors are silhouetted at an observation deck of Azabudai Hills in Tokyo, Japan, on April 26, 2024. (Photo: Reuters)

TOKYO - A sperm bank only for donors who agree to disclose their identity will be set up at a Tokyo clinic, its organiser said Thursday, in a first for Japan.

Hiromi Ito, who counsels on infertility at Private Care Clinic Tokyo, said she hopes "to create a society where parents can openly tell their children the facts about their births."

Currently, sperm donations in the country are carried out almost exclusively on an anonymous basis.

Ito, who gave birth to two children through donated sperm, said she aims to start the bank by the end of this year.

In Japan, artificial insemination using donated sperm began in 1948, with over 10,000 people believed to have been born through the method. Currently, 16 medical institutions are registered with the Japan Society of Obstetrics and Gynaecology to perform the assisted procedure.

But many facilities have suspended their services as an increased number of people have become wary of offering sperm amid a global move in recent years to recognise children's rights to know their biological parents.

Ito said she fears that the decrease in certified services for sperm donations has pushed parents into seeking other ways to receive sperm, for example by resorting to social media, which could lead to high-risk transactions with individuals.

The planned sperm bank will not only be safe for users but will "respond online so that interested parties can use it regardless of where they live," Ito said.

Through its official website, the clinic will solicit men aged 20 to 45 and then select donors based on sperm function tests and whether they have sexually transmitted infections.

The donated sperm will be frozen at the clinic and stored along with personal information about the donors. As the clinic does not have an obstetrics and gynaecology department, it will send the frozen sperm to facilities registered with the Japan Society of Obstetrics and Gynaecology to perform the artificial insemination.

The clinic will charge around 70,000 yen (US$449) for one course of artificial insemination to cover testing, storage and other fees.

"In Japan, medical institutions have requested confidentiality from (sperm) donors and recipients, and the procedure has been treated as something to feel guilty about," Ito said.

She stressed the importance of notifying children born through donated sperm at an early stage about the circumstances of their birth, saying unexpected discovery of the truth can be deeply shocking later.

Ito, whose husband was diagnosed with azoospermia soon after marriage, once thought of a life without children. But she later reconsidered and decided to try artificial insemination through donated sperm after her husband said he wanted to raise a child who was at least biologically connected to his wife.

Ito said she has told her children using picture books that a "kind person" helped in their births.

"If the right to know the origin of one's birth is guaranteed, a parent can be confident in telling them about the facts," she said.

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