Published November 16, 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Between "Medical" and "Social" Egg Freezing: A Comparative Analysis of Regulatory Frameworks in Austria, Germany, Israel, and the Netherlands

  • 1. (1) Department of Medical Ethics and History of Medicine, University Medical Centre Göttingen; (2) Department of Human Resource Management Studies, Sapir Academic College
  • 2. Erasmus School of Health Policy & Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam
  • 3. Department of Medical Ethics and History of Medicine, University Medical Centre Göttingen

Description

Egg freezing has led to heated debates in healthcare policy and bioethics. A crucial issue in this context concerns the distinction between “medical” and “social” egg freezing (MEF and SEF)—contrasting objections to bio-medicalization with claims for oversimplification. Yet such categorization remains a criterion for regulation. This paper aims to explore the “regulatory boundary-work” around the “medical”–”social” distinction in different egg freezing regulations.

Based on systematic documents’ analysis we present a cross-national comparison of the way the “medical”–”social” differentiation finds expression in regulatory frameworks in Austria, Germany, Israel, and the Netherlands. Findings are organized along two emerging themes: (1) the definition of MEF and its distinctiveness—highlighting regulatory differences in the clarity of the definition and in the medical indications used for creating it (less clear in Austria and Germany, detailed in Israel and the Netherlands); and (2) hierarchy of medical over social motivations reflected in usage and funding regulations. Blurred demarcation lines between “medical” and “social” are further discussed as representing a paradoxical inclusion of SEF while offering new insights into the complexity and normativity of this distinction. Finally, we draw conclusions for policymaking and the bioethical debate, also concerning the related cryopolitical aspects.

Notes

The project also received funding from the Minerva Stiftung Post-Doctoral Fellowship of the Max Planck Society; Open Access funding enabled and organized by projekt DEAL.

Files

Rimon-Zarfaty_et_al-2021-Journal_of_Bioethical_Inquiry.pdf

Files (564.2 kB)

Additional details

Funding

LEaDing Fellows – LEaDing Fellows 707404
European Commission
TIMEGG – TIMING FERTILIY- A Comparative Analysis of Time Constructions and the Social Practice of Egg-Freezing in Germany and Israel 749889
European Commission