Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

IVF couple 'will fight for others'

Glenda Cooper
Friday 01 March 1996 01:02 GMT
Comments

A couple who were told they were too old to have fertility treatment on the NHS pledged to continue the fight for other couples in their thirties as they showed off their three-week-old son for the first time yesterday.

Julie and Michael Seale thanked the anonymous businessman who paid for the test-tube baby treatment which enabled them to become a "real family" but added that they would keep pressurising the Government to adopt a national policy on fertility treatments.

Mrs Seale, 38, from Sheffield, was told two years ago that she was too old to be accepted for in vitro fertilisation [IVF] treatment under her local health authority's rules, which lay down an upper age limit of 35. Had the couple lived in Wakefield - just eight miles from their home, but covered by a different health authority - Mrs Seale would have been eligible for NHS treatment until she was 42.

The couple unsuccessfully took Sheffield Health Authority to the High Court to challenge the policy, as they could not afford the pounds 2,000 cost of the treatment which had only a 25 per cent success rate. After they failed, an anonymous businessman donated the money and Mrs Seale, who was treated at the reproduction research and treatment unit and Nottingham University, became pregnant. Their baby, Jordan, was born on 5 February.

Mrs Seale told their benefactor, who has been sent pictures of Jordan via his solicitor: "I want to thank you for making us a family . . . If it wasn't for you, Jordan would not have been born." She added: "We are going to keep up the fight for other couples even though we may be a small voice in the wilderness."

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in