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There are many reasons to become a donor. You might want to help others, or a particular friend or family member. If you have children of your own, you might want others to have the opportunity to be a parent.
Your decision will have an important impact on the people who receive your donation, on any children born as a result, and on your own family if you have one, or plan to have one. It's important to think carefully about how you feel about this now, and how you may feel in the future.
Donating sperm, eggs or embryos for others to use in their fertility treatment is very different to donating organs or blood. You are potentially creating new human beings. The clinic where you donate will offer you counselling which can give you an opportunity to discuss what is involved and future implications.
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One of the duties of the HFEA is to keep a record of all assisted reproduction treatments, including those using donated sperm, eggs or embryos, and the outcome of those treatments. This record is known as the HFEA Register.
As a donor, you are entitled to know whether any children were born from your donation and the number and gender of those children, as well as the year(s) in which they were born. There are limits to the number of children that can be created using your donation. From 2005, a maximum of 10 families can be created from your donation.
Children born from your donation will also be able to contact the HFEA when they reach the age of 18 and ask for information about you.
If you donated between 1991 and 1 April 2005, and if you have not re-registered as an identifiable donor, then your anonymity will be protected. Any donor-conceived people contacting the HFEA will be given non-identifying information about you ? the information you supplied when you made your donation (or additional information you may have supplied later on).
If you donated after 1 April 2005, or have re-registered as an identifiable donor, donor-conceived people can be given both non-identifying and identifying information about you.
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Following a number of examples arising from recent court proceedings relating to the use of embryos by single women which were created using the sperm of their estranged partners, the HFEA highlights possible issues surrounding the legal position of the male donor in embryo donation arrangements. Find out more.