Opinion

Left out in the cold: seven reasons not to freeze your eggs

In 2012, the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) lifted the experimental designation on human egg freezing. At this time, it was careful to indicate that freezing technology should not to be used for elective purposes, particularly as this might give young women false hope. A 2014 fact sheet prepared by the ASRM confirms that “Even in younger women (i.e., < 38 years old), the chance that one frozen egg will yield a baby in the future is around 2-12%.”

These professional cautions are of no consequence to Facebook or Apple, however. Both of these companies have decided to include egg freezing in their employee benefit package. As an alternative, they could have decided to improve the health benefits offered to all employees. Or, to stay focused on the issue of reproduction, they could have included a full year of family leave in the benefit package. Instead, they chose to pay up to $20,000 for egg freezing. Now call me crazy, but I think this choice just might have to do with their corporate priorities – which include keeping talented workers in their 20s to early 30s in the workplace, not at home caring for babies.

Sadly, from my perspective, some describe this corporate decision in positive terms. They congratulate the companies for “taking the lead”. In this way, they both endorse the decision and encourage others to follow this lead. Already, Virtus Health in Australia has announced that it too will pay for egg freezing for its female employees. According to the Medical Director of Virtus “… if it’s good enough for Apple and Facebook, it’s good enough for us.”

Here are seven good reasons why Facebook and Apple employees should reject this employee benefit.

First, ovarian stimulation and egg retrieval to collect eggs for freezing are both onerous and risky. The two weeks of daily injections are known to be painful and uncomfortable. There can be cramping, abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting. More serious possible side effects include rapid weight gain and damage to organs close to the ovaries. More serious still is the small risk of severe ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome which can require hospitalization and rarely has resulted in death (see here and here). As well, there is a small chance of infertility (1%) and there are reports suggesting a link between ovarian stimulation and certain cancers. In brief, there are risks associated with egg freezing.

Second, contrary to popular belief, egg freezing does not set back a woman’s biological clock. While it is certainly true that eggs from a younger woman are more likely to generate a healthy embryo and a healthy pregnancy than eggs from an older woman, it very much matters that the body into which the embryos will be transferred is the body of an older woman. From a purely biological perspective, it is in the interest of women to have their children while they are younger.

Third, while we know that egg freezing is of limited efficacy (there is only 2-12% chance that a frozen egg will result in a baby), we don’t yet know with confidence that egg freezing is completely safe for the children born of this technology. Preliminary, short-term safety data appear reassuring. Long-term safety data are not available. And, specific to elective egg freezing, the ASRM reports that: “Data on the safety, efficacy, cost-effectiveness and emotional risks of elective oocyte cryopreservation are insufficient to recommend elective oocyte cryopreservation.”

Fourth, egg freezing is a half-way technology insofar as eggs in storage are of no value to a woman who wants to make a baby unless she uses in vitro fertilization (IVF). This is a costly option and it is not clear that this is part of the employee benefit package. This effectively means that Facebook and Apple are willing to pay up to $20,000 to keep women “unpregnant”. If the women want to become pregnant using their frozen eggs, they have to pay for this. Moreover, if they do become pregnant, paid family leave is quite limited and arguably not supportive of a decision to reproduce.

Fifth, normalizing egg freezing does nothing to correct the fundamental social injustice experienced by women in the workplace who are effectively forced to choose between having a career and raising a family. This is not a choice demanded of young men. The working assumption is that they can be fathers and productive employees.

Sixth, providing women with the option of egg freezing does not meaningfully expand women’s choices because it does nothing to ameliorate the context in which they must make decisions. The social context, which does not assume that women can be mothers and productive employees, significantly (and inappropriately) constrains the options they get to choose between.

Seventh, many of the young women who freeze their eggs are unlikely to use them. They may never find a partner with whom they want to have children and they may not want to be a single mother. Alternatively, they may find a partner with whom they want to have children and they may prefer to conceive their children in the privacy of their bedroom, instead of conceiving their children in a lab. What should/will happen to those unused frozen eggs? Will the women want to sell them on the open market for reproductive or research use? What if the cosmetic industry has an interest in purchasing this reproductive material? We all need to think carefully about the downstream effects of encouraging elective egg freezing.

Facebook and Apple employees should not only reject egg freezing, but should lobby their respective companies to provide them with a benefit package that is truly family-friendly. At minimum, this package should include a year of family leave following the birth of a child or the legal adoption of a child, on-site subsidized day care, flexible work arrangements, and support for re-entry into the workforce.

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2 Comments
  • Pat Vanderkooy says:

    This was a very thoughtful and thorough discussion of a sensitive topic that is bigger than freezing of eggs.

    “…providing women with the option of egg freezing does not meaningfully expand women’s choices because it does nothing to ameliorate the context in which they must make decisions” – that’s the important point, in my view. Prof Baylis offers good advice: “..family leave following the birth of a child or the legal adoption of a child, on-site subsidized day care, flexible work arrangements, and support for re-entry into the workforce”. ANY and ALL of those options would make it so much easier for women to make choices.

    In the fifth point, there is mention of young men from whom a choice is not demanded. I wonder if there should be an assumption or even an expectation that some choice should be demanded of men too? If a young man becomes a father, he too should consider how he, his career plans and his workplace will be affected by parenthood. On-site day care and flexible work arrangements should be available at his work place too; he and his employer should also expect to share the responsibilities when a mom returns to work. Dads can share the work interruptions, share the expectation that they must flex their work hours and schedules, share the duty to rush out when the daycare calls to say a child is sick, share the loss of sick days or vacation days because a child needs to be home, possibly delay a promotion because he’s just too tired this year …. Employers and BOTH parents should and could be making adjustments to accomodate the needs of families with children – in ways that share the load and maximize the benefits. With that kind of ongoing support, I hope women can feel as comfortable as men when they anticipate starting a family – those women can be moms and productive employees, just like the men can be dads and productive employees!

  • Melanie F says:

    There’s a wrong assumption inherent in egg freezing technology; that anyone can do the social role of mother. Your age is immaterial. Why not leave it till the firm no longer want you?

    In my experience, being a mother is extremely onerous. The physical exertion of labour is not to be underestimated. And early days are tough, and even tougher if you’re recovering from a C section! The physical demands of the early years, especially dealing with tiredness, is also a huge drain on resources. It needs the energy of youth.

    Toddler years – bending and picking a child up off the floor, getting up at night, sometimes many times a night, lifting a child in and out of the car – are not much easier than the newborn stage. Of course the wisdom and patience of older women can help deal with the tantrums, but it’s a young woman’s game.

    Then there’s the social side. All mums need companionship and support. Being a 40 or 50 year old can place you in an unenviable position at toddler group. Who is going to sympathise with you and share the stress, walking alongside you in the journey? And if a young mum does decide to befriend you, what will you have in common beyond parenting? Socially you’re more of a grandmother than a mum, and you may be very lonely.

    Adaptability is something all parents need. You may need to adapt your work, your patterns of behaviour, your preferred activities, your body clock, your furniture and paintwork, your models of gender roles – all sorts of things may need changing in the light of parenting. If you’ve spent many, many years getting your life just as you like it, this must be a huge loss and a wrench. Whether the changes are getting rid of the coveted beige carpet, or leaving a demanding job role in search of balance.

    Lastly, there’s the physical risks. There’s no denying that the age of the mother and the father have relevance to the chance of the baby experiencing full health. All sorts of risks – from Down’s to Autism – go up with the age of the parents. Some of these are things you can screen for, but others are great unknowns. Guilt is a part of parenting, as is risk. But there’s no point in taking risks you can avoid.

    Encouraging women to leave parenting till latter years is not good for them.

Authors

Françoise Baylis

Contributor

Françoise Baylis is a research professor at Dalhousie University. She is a member of the Order of Canada and the Order of Nova Scotia as well as a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences.

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