The Atlantic

Can Lost Embryos Give Rise to a Wrongful-Death Suit?

An Ohio couple wants their embryos that were destroyed in a fertility-clinic meltdown to be deemed people.
Source: Ted Horowitz / Getty

Over a single weekend in March, an unprecedented disaster hit fertility clinics—twice.

First came the news that the University Hospitals Fertility Center in Ohio, lost more than 4,000 eggs and embryos in a malfunctioning cryogenic tank. Then, in an unrelated incident, Pacific Fertility Center in California reported that liquid-nitrogen levels had fallen too low in a tank holding “several thousand” eggs and embryos, affecting an unconfirmed number.

In-vitro fertilization can be a draining process—financially, physically, emotionally. And for some families, these embryos had been their last chance to have biological children. they will never have, of the siblings their children will never know. At times, they spoke not just of “embryos” but of “babies.”

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