Delhi HC permits 50-year-old woman to receive frozen embryos for assisted reproduction – The Tribune

Home Latest News Delhi HC permits 50-year-old woman to receive frozen embryos for assisted reproduction – The Tribune
Delhi HC permits 50-year-old woman to receive frozen embryos for assisted reproduction – The Tribune

The Delhi High Court has permitted a woman aged 50 years and two months to receive her cryopreserved embryos even after crossing the threshold age, saying reproductive rights and access to parenthood cannot be reduced to purely technical or pedantic application of statutory conditions.

Justice Purushaindra Kumar Kaurav said the embryos were retrieved at a point when the woman was undisputedly within prescribed age bracket and the object of the Assisted Reproductive Technology Regulation (ART) Act was not to create “insurmountable barriers” in the continuation of lawfully undertaken treatment processes.

The ART Act stipulates that a woman has to be above the age of 21 and below the age of 50, and a man has to be above the age of 21 years and below the age of 55 years.

While dealing with the petition by the woman and her husband, the court stated that reproductive rights and access to parenthood cannot be reduced to purely technical or pedantic application of statutory conditions.
It emphasised that cryopreserved embryos were intrinsically connected with the petitioners’ reproductive autonomy, decisional privacy and their constitutionally protected choice relating to procreation and family life.

“In view of the peculiar facts of the case, this court is of the considered opinion that denial of permission to utilise the remaining five cryopreserved embryos solely on account of the petitioners having marginally crossed age threshold of the ART process would not subserve the object of the ART Act.
“In view of the aforesaid, the petition stands allowed. The Petitioners are permitted to undergo frozen embryo transfer of their remaining five cryopreserved embryos, with all medical safeguards,” the court said in its judgement passed on May 25.
The petitioners decided to undergo IVF treatment at a private hospital after the demise of their son in May 2025.
After one round of unsuccessful transfer, the couple asked the doctors to utilise their remaining embryos. The hospital, however, refused to proceed further on the ground that the woman had crossed the upper age limit.
In its judgement, the court stated that the woman was 49 years, 11 months and 14 days old at the time of retrieval and the couple was not seeking extraction of fresh embryos but utilisation of embryos which were retrieved when they satisfied the statutory age requirement.
It noted that the woman was now 50 years and 2 months old, and there was no medical opinion on record to indicate that utilizing the existing cryopreserved embryos would pose any immediate or exceptional medical risk beyond the general policy concerns underlying the enactment.
The Tribune, now published from Chandigarh, started publication on February 2, 1881, in Lahore (now in Pakistan). It was started by Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia, a public-spirited philanthropist, and is run by a trust comprising five eminent persons as trustees.

The Tribune, the largest selling English daily in North India, publishes news and views without any bias or prejudice of any kind. Restraint and moderation, rather than agitational language and partisanship, are the hallmarks of the newspaper. It is an independent newspaper in the real sense of the term.

The Tribune has two sister publications, Punjabi Tribune (in Punjabi) and Dainik Tribune (in Hindi).
Remembering Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia

source

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.