A Grieving Family Wonders: What if They Had Known the Medical History of Sperm Donor 1558?
When Laura and David Gunner learned their 27-year-old son, Steven, had died from an opioid overdose, the couple were stricken by grief but not entirely surprised. They had struggled to help him overcome addictions and erratic behavior for more than a decade. Seeking solace in the aftermath of Stevens 2020 death, the upstate New York couple joined the Donor Sibling Registry, a website that connects sperm and egg donors and donor-conceived people. They hoped to make contact with the mothers and fathers of other children who, like Steven, had been conceived with sperm from a particular donor sold by a sperm bank in Fairfax, Va.
Donor 1558 had been described in his sperm-bank profile as a guitar- and hockey-playing college student with fair hair and brown eyes. The Gunners were eager to see glimpses of Stevens features in photos of Donor 1558s other offspring. They also wanted to let the parents of Stevens half-siblings know that he had schizophrenia, a psychiatric disorder that causes hallucinations and delusionsand which can run in families.
In interactions with the other parents, the Gunners learned disturbing new information about Donor 1558: The handsome, athletic, musical student had been diagnosed with schizophrenia and had died of an opioid overdose in 2018, at age 46. And when Ms. Gunner later connected with the mother of Donor 1558, she learned that he had once been hospitalized for behavioral issues. For unknown reasons, he didnt disclose that on a questionnaire he completed before donating sperm.
Schizophrenia often runs in families, and having a parent with the mental illness raises a childs risk for having it. But such offspring are much more likely not to develop schizophrenia than they are to develop the illness, said Dr. Niamh Mullins, an assistant professor of psychiatry at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
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The Gunners decided to push for change. They shared their story with their state senator, Patrick Gallivan, in November and encouraged him to craft legislation that would require reproductive tissue banks to verify health and other types of information provided by sperm, egg and embryo donors. In December, Sen. Gallivan introduced the Donor Conceived Person Protection Act. As part of the proposed legislation, donors must waive confidentiality protections so their medical records from the past five years can be checked.
The Food and Drug Administration requires screening for sperm donors for infectious diseases like HIV and hepatitis. In addition, some sperm banks test prospective donors to see if they carry genes associated with rare hereditary diseases like cystic fibrosis and Tay-Sachs disease. But there is no easy way to identify people at risk for schizophrenia, which is believed to affect about 1% of the population.
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