Chinese Woman Loses Legal Challenge for Right to Freeze Her Eggs

1 month ago 45

Asia Pacific|A Chinese Woman Sued to Freeze Her Eggs. She Lost.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/08/world/asia/china-single-woman-freeze-eggs.html

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

Despite a declining birthrate that has alarmed the nation’s leaders, regulations in China prevent unmarried women from freezing their eggs.

A woman sits on a bench in a park, a surgical mask covering her chin.
Teresa Xu in 2021, outside Chaoyang Court before attending a hearing in her case against a hospital that rejected her request to freeze eggs.Credit...Roman Pilipey/EPA, via Shutterstock

Alexandra StevensonZixu Wang

Aug. 8, 2024Updated 9:07 a.m. ET

Faced with a shrinking population, China’s top leadership has tried everything to get women to have more babies. Everything, it turns out, except allowing unmarried women to freeze their eggs.

A Beijing court this week chose to uphold a longstanding rule that only married women may use the procedure. Rights activists say the rule is unfair because it excludes single women from a reproductive measure that gives them the option to put off childbirth.

The ruling centers on a lawsuit filed by Teresa Xu, against an obstetrics hospital after a doctor denied her access to egg freezing services and instead told her that she should get married and have children quickly.

On Wednesday, Ms. Xu said the Chaoyang Intermediate People’s Court in Beijing had rejected her lawsuit, exhausting her legal options in a six-year battle for reproductive rights. The court had argued that her rights were not violated.

In a livestream video, Ms. Xu, 36, a freelance writer in Guangzhou, said she wasn’t surprised by the court’s decision. “I was mentally prepared for it,” she said in the video that was later posted to her social media account. “This result wasn’t all that unexpected.”

In China, the ruling Communist Party continues to have a large say over who may have children, and how many. For years, it allowed families to have only one child. As births slowed significantly, threatening growth, officials loosened the one-child policy to allow for two children and then three.


Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.


Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

Want all of The Times? Subscribe.