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The number of children a donor can father depends on where he lives and where his sperm is sent. In Denmark the limit is 25, a number that is supposed to guard against accidental incest between siblings. In Britain it is 10. In the United States the number is 25 births for each donor within a population of 800,000, according to guidelines issued by the American Society for Reproductive Medicine. One 24-year-old Arhus University student, a regular donor at Cryos who asked to go unidentified to preserve his anonymity, said he sold his sperm for money and got a kick out of providing this "service." “I think it's kind of cool,” the student said. “The meaning of life is about spreading my genes.” If he ever has to divulge his name or if the company ever stops paying him, he will stop donating immediately, he said. “For now, I'll keep visiting for as long as I can,” he said. Cryos claims a good track record. Since the company opened in 1987, it says, its banked Danish sperm has led to 10,000 pregnancies around the world. One study at a local hospital in Denmark pegged the pregnancy rate for sperm from Cryos at 12 percent to 31 percent, which is above average, Mr. Schou said. After thawing, the donated sperm is screened and rescreened for volume and motility - how quickly it swims. Only 8 percent to 10 percent of would-be donors are accepted. Some men are shattered when they fail to make the cut. “Sometimes we say your sperm is good, but you are a bad freezer,” Mr. Schou said. The fastest-growing markets for sperm banks are lesbians and single women, which make up about 20 percent of Cryos's client list, mostly abroad. Denmark, despite its sexual permissiveness, has a law barring unmarried women from buying sperm from a doctor. But Mr. Schou is branching out, working on franchises in Africa and Asia, countries where prospective clients do not necessarily want blond, blueeyed Vikings. So he is looking for ethnically diverse donors. He has even sold to several Middle Eastern countries, where sperm donations are taboo. “Some say it's difficult to sell sand in the Sahara,” Mr.Schou joked. “I think it's more difficult to sell sperm.” And what of all the ethical quandaries surrounding sperm banking, including medical screening and gender selection? Sperm banks can test for a genetic mutation indicating cystic fibrosis, but then should they also test for Down syndrome? What if a donor develops colon cancer at 50? Should the sperm bank have to tell the children conceived with his sperm? Should potential parents be able to select gender, as they can in the United States? Already companies market their donors' I.Q. levels, their medical histories, their good looks. Is that good or bad? "To some extent whenever you choose a partner in the ordinary way, you are looking for favorable genetic traits," said Dr. Piers Benn, a lecturer in medical ethics at Imperial College in London. “It's a question of degree, I think.” “All of this raises lots of ethical questions, but sometimes law and regulations are not the best way to deal with them,” Dr. Benn said. “Informed consent, making sure people are adequately informed, but not heavy-handed with the law, is the best way.”
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