Regulating In-Vitro Fertilisation Treatment in Malaysia:
Obligations to Protect and Assist the Parties
Noraiza Abdul Rahman, Mazlifah Mansoor, Mazlina Mohamad Mangsor
Faculty of Law, Universiti Teknologi MARA, Shah Alam, Selangor, Malaysia
Keywords: Harms, In-vitro fertilisation, legislation, needs, risk.
Abstract:
The reproductive technology of in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) demands substantive response from legislators who
wish to regulate the use of this important technology, and the existing guidelines may require revision and
development in order to deal with the particular ethical issues that this technology raises. This paper aims to
explain the risks as well as the types of harms which relate to the shared morality of Malaysian society, the
parties involved and the resulting children born as a result of IVF, and further delineates why the Guideline of
the MMC on Assisted Reproduction does not adequately address these harms. In prioritising the health of the
resulting child, I advocate that the risks are of equal concern and it is appropriate for the Government to call
for legislation. It is my contention that if the protection of these identified groups is dealt with conscientiously,
and new laws are introduced, this will help to achieve the intended goal of introducing robust IVF legislation
in Malaysia. This paper will conclude that only through the enactment of legislation which accurately reflects
the cultural and religious values and the shared morality within Malaysian society, will the Government instil
public confidence in medical law in Malaysia, particularly in IVF.
1 INTRODUCTION
Today, assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs) are
available throughout most of the world and the
practice has gradually developed and is now largely
different from that used during the early days because
of refinements in laboratory technology and clinical
practices. As a result, the technologies bring with
them many new and challenging legal and ethical
issues, some of which will be highlighted throughout
this paper. This paper aims to highlight the question
of why Malaysia has to balance the IVF needs, risks
and harms in regulating the IVF practice in a way that
suits the country’s needs, cultures and religions.
Nonetheless, this paper attempts to explain the
physical and psychological risks as well as the types
of harms that relate to the parties involved and the
resulting children born as a result of IVF, and further
delineates why the Guideline of the Malaysian
Medical Council (MMC) on Assisted Reproduction
does not adequately address these harms in order to
protect and assist the parties.
2 MATERIALS AND METHODS
This paper employs a qualitative and doctrinal
research method through content analysis approach
where the Guideline of the MMC on Assisted
Reproduction is examined. It comprises of primary
and secondary sources through the library-based
research. Whilst the first encompasses of Malaysian
legislation, policies and judicial decisions, the latter
constitutes a significant proportion of online
databases content including LexisNexis, Westlaw and
others.
3 RESULT AND DISCUSSION
It is clear that ARTs are designed to address the
traumatic problem of infertility and offer powerful
techniques to help people to have biologically related
children. At root, there are three main types of fertility
treatment: medical treatment (such as use of drugs for
ovulation induction); surgical treatment (for example,
laparoscopy for ablation of endometriosis); and
assisted reproduction such as IVF and other
68
Rahman, N., Mansoor, M. and Mangsor, M.
Regulating In-Vitro Fertilisation Treatment in Malaysia: Obligations to Protect and Assist the Parties.
DOI: 10.5220/0010054700680073
In Proceedings of the International Law Conference (iN-LAC 2018) - Law, Technology and the Imperative of Change in the 21st Century, pages 68-73
ISBN: 978-989-758-482-4
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
techniques. Assisted reproduction frequently
involves the handling of gametes or embryos and
offers a wide range of methods to circumvent human
infertility including IVF, embryo transfer,
intrauterine insemination (IUI); donor insemination
intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), gamete
intra-fallopian transfer (GIFT), and zygote intra-
fallopian transfer (ZIFT), and many of these
procedures are combined with IVF. Since IVF
technology is currently the most popular and common
procedure used in public and private hospitals in
Malaysia, to overcome infertility.
Undoubtedly, the technical aspects of IVF were
first pioneered and developed by Robert Edwards and
Patrick Steptoe in Oldham General Hospital in
England, culminating in the first IVF baby in 1978
(Vaughn: 2010). The science of IVF has improved
considerably in more than 30 years since the first IVF
baby was born. Originally, this technology was
designed for women with tubal factor infertility, but
now has become the most common treatment for all
causes of infertility. Thus, it is evident that since the
arrival of the first IVF baby in the UK in 1978, IVF
technology has opened the door to a solution that
gives infertile couples hopes that infertility problems
can be overcome (The Warnock Committee: 1984).
However, whilst the point of this advancement,
particularly in relation to in vitro fertilisation (IVF)
technology is widely understood, its uses are
controversial and concerns pertaining to the
appropriate use of IVF are one of the vital matters for
public policy in Malaysia. The reproductive
technology of in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) demands
substantive response from legislators who wish to
regulate the use of this important technology, and the
existing guidelines may require revision and
development in order to deal with the particular
ethical issues that this technology raises.
The term in vitro fertilisation scientifically refers
to the uniting of sperm and egg in a laboratory dish,
instead of inside a woman’s body, to create embryos
that can be transferred to the woman’s uterus after
going through certain developmental stages outside
the body. The IVF technique itself is now well-known
among infertile couples and is fast becoming a routine
part of infertility treatment in many countries. On the
first day of IVF, an infertile woman will be given
hormone treatment which may include either pills of
clomiphene-citrate, or injections, to induce her
ovaries to produce more than one egg in her next
cycle. Having removed the eggs from the woman’s
ovaries, they then will be placed in culture in small
glass dishes known as petri dishes. Interestingly, there
are no test tubes involved in this procedure despite the
popular label of test tube babies. Sperm is then
prepared and obtained from the male partner by
means of masturbation and insemination, allowing
fertilisation to take place in at least 80 percent of the
ripe eggs. Not more than a specified number of the
selected embryos are transferred to the woman’s body
with the hope that all or at least one of them will
implant in the lining of the uterus and develop
successfully to be born nine months later. Regarding
the transfer, when the embryo(s) is or are in the
uterus, the remainder of the process is effectively out
of the hands of medical science, and it is at this point
that things are most likely to go wrong. Even with the
most experienced IVF teams, there are cases where
the majority of embryos transferred, fail to implant in
the uterus. Given that the success rate of IVF
relatively differs from one patient to another patient
depending on their age, diagnosis and length of
infertility, this means that sometimes the procedure
may have to be repeated many times and this is one
of the greatest risks attached to IVF for those
undergoing treatment (Deech and Smajdor: 2010).
This might explain why it can be physically,
financially and emotionally burdensome, but still
those burdens are often regarded as a price worth
paying to those who seek treatment, in order to have
own biological children.
3.1 The Risks to the Mother
Like any other form of reproductive technology, IVF
brings with it a long list of risks – most of which have
provoked a raft of thorny ethical questions related to
issues such as multiple births and the use of gamete
donation in Malaysia. These have led to the
introduction of legislation and other legal controls.
On the other hand, IVF is undoubtedly a great
technology which could be used to help many
infertile couples overcome their infertility and enable
them to have their own biological children. But what
few couples may not fully comprehend until they
undertake the actual process of IVF is that there are
very real risks involved. The risks are necessarily
different and asymmetrical for a couple: generally,
the woman will suffer more compared to the man as
he does not have to undergo any invasive procedure
or take drugs for superovulation as she does. She
therefore is the person who must bear the burden of
intervention and inconvenience in the IVF process
because, in IVF, the woman’s body is the focus of
medical intervention and monitoring, regardless of
the cause of infertility within the couple (De Lacey et
al: 2009). However, the stresses and emotional
pressures involved in IVF may affect men as well as
Regulating In-Vitro Fertilisation Treatment in Malaysia: Obligations to Protect and Assist the Parties
69
women especially after an unsuccessful IVF
procedure. These pressures in themselves are of
sufficient seriousness to justify legislation in this field
to protect the parties.
Studies have shown that there is a direct causal
link or significant relationship between stress and
reproductive failure (Nakamura et al: 2008). In
approximately 90 percent of unsuccessful IVF cases,
the patients are likely to experience a sense of failure,
loss and grief as well as, quite possibly, anger and
depression (Sutton: 2004). To support this, De Lacey
et al. (2009) assert that “the experience of infertility
and the escalating series of interventions involved in
diagnosis and treatment culminating in IVF
procedures is widely recognised to represent an
unforeseen source of stress for the majority of
couples”. Sometimes, the procedures involved can
put a strain on relationships and men may experience
feelings of stress, guilt or anxiety. For women too, the
tensions and uncertainties involved may take a toll.
During these difficult times, support should be
provided by the staff of the infertility unit, and usually
patients may find benefit and get advice from
counselling. For instance, the European Commission
in July 2008 issued a proposal for a directive of the
European Parliament and of the Council on the
application of patients’ rights in cross-border health
care, which states that a physician has a partial
responsibility for the patient he/she refers, especially
regarding the provision of information and
counselling (Pennings: 2008). It is suggested that this
requirement should also be extended to all countries
that offer IVF across the world. Hence, patients
should be able to receive counselling in any country
they are receiving IVF in, as it is vital for them to fully
understand the effects and consequences of the
treatment. Thus, it is true to say that whilst embarking
on IVF may ultimately fulfil the couple’s quest for a
child, in the meantime, it is likely to involve physical
risks and negative emotions during the process.
The evidence on IVF techniques and procedures
shows that IVF cycles can pose severe health risks for
the mother. The whole procedure of IVF (the
superovulation, the surgery, the monitoring, the
transfer, the waiting) and then any subsequent
pregnancy and delivery, demands physical and
emotional strength and can be uncomfortable,
inconvenient and stressful (Vaughn: 2010). There is a
chance of complications from taking the fertility
drugs to stimulate ovaries, including abdominal pain,
memory loss, mood swings and headaches; and the
surgery itself comes with a risk, however low, of side
effects such as bleeding, infection and damaged tissue
(Sutton: 2004). Perhaps the most worrisome among
these is a rare, but potentially dangerous condition
known as ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome
(OHSS), characterised by swollen and painful ovaries
caused by the drugs used for superovulation. In its
severe form, OHSS can cause nausea, vomiting,
sudden weight gain and fluid retention, difficulty in
breathing, the formation of blood clots and, very
rarely, death (Deech and Smajdor: 2015). In relation
to these risky circumstances, there was a case in the
UK where a woman named Temilola Akinbolagbe
suffered a massive heart attack two days after she
began IVF treatment. It was discovered that her body
reacted fatally to the drugs given for ovarian
stimulation and sadly her life-support machine was
switched off five days after she was admitted to a
hospital in London. She had been a healthy young
woman who had simply yearned for a child via the
treatment. Similarly in Malaysia, a newspaper report
recently revealed that a young woman died after
going through an intrusive IVF treatment in a fertility
clinic. The cause of death was due to her “multi-organ
failure secondary to ovarian hyperstimulation
syndrome” (Khoo: 2011). It was believed to be the
first death in the history of IVF in Malaysia.
Besides the risks attached to mother, there are also
concerns that IVF may lead to birth defects, low birth
weight and diseases such as cancer, for the potential
future children. Multiple pregnancy, which is a
common result of IVF transfer involving more than
one embryo, potentially raises the risks to children’s
life and health by increasing the chances of high
blood pressure, anaemia and gestational diabetes.
Having already examined the risks involved in IVF,
it is evident that multiple births resulting from IVF
can carry risks for both mother and child. For
instance, it can increase the health hazards to the
mother and her unborn children who are more likely
to be medically aborted or to be delivered
prematurely with all the attendant complications of
prematurity. Also, the children's health and
development can be affected: they have an increased
risk of cerebral palsy and they are more likely to die
around the time of their birth.
3.2 The Harms to the Resulting Child
Whilst it may be the case that no doctor wishes to
expose patients and potential children to physical
harm or psychosocial stresses involving the feelings
of failure, loss and grief, as well as anger and
depression, especially after an unsuccessful IVF
procedure, it is well-known that IVF has inherent
risks which can be minimised by adequate legal
protection. One of the serious risks associated with
iN-LAC 2018 - International Law Conference 2018
70
IVF is the increased chance of having a multiple
pregnancy, which can significantly increase the
development of complications for mother and baby.
It must be highlighted that ensuring safe and
effective use of IVF is the goal of ethical practice and
sound public policy in Malaysia. Enabling a child to
be born via IVF when there is a proportionate risk that
the child will be born harmed or damaged, would
raise significant public concerns. For instance, Kew
argues that the public in Malaysia expect safe and
ethical practices from all doctors, and that the public
has been critical of the medical profession,
particularly in terms of having adequate regulation
and addressing problems which are important to the
society. Yet it is not easy to determine what kind of
ethical and legal policy would be acceptable given the
wide variety of situations potentially involving harm
to IVF children. In order to identify this, a firm
understanding of the potential harm must be well
established. In other words, an analysis of the
potential harm and risk situations for the child in IVF
procedures must be developed.
Following the earlier discussions in relation to the
risks and harms in IVF and pertaining to multiple
pregnancy, miscarriage and birth defects, the
potential harm associated with its use can be regarded
as physical damage that may affect the child born as
a result of this type of treatment. It is evident that the
higher rate of multiple births in IVF due to the
implantation of several embryos in the uterus at any
one time, contributes to an increased rate of
miscarriages as well as pre-term and low birth weight
babies.
In fact, according to the UK’s Human Fertilisation
and Embryology Authority (HFEA), as IVF has
become more successful, the number of multiple
births has increased. Statistics in 2007 showed that
around 40 percent of IVF babies are twins, and
therefore three times more likely than single babies to
be stillborn. An increased rate of twin births
represents IVF's biggest risk for mothers and babies
because twin births significantly raise the chances of
mortality, prematurity, low birth weight and cerebral
palsy for babies. However, with the introduction of
single embryo transfer (SET) in 2007, the HFEA
reports that the figure dropped to 22 percent based on
the data for the first half of 2009. This shows that
clinics have been working hard to reduce the number
and risks of the multiple births in the UK. With regard
to that, Hamilton states that the biggest risk to the
health and welfare of the child born as a result of IVF
is the hazards of multiple pregnancies. These are
associated with an increased incidence of blindness,
learning defects, lung problems and other ailments. A
recent study also reveals that children in multiple
births have a greater risk of serious health problems
that can develop into lifelong impairments.
It is not only the children who are at risk - multiple
pregnancies also pose risks to mothers, including pre-
eclampsia, diabetes and heart disease. Although
Robertson (2004) believes that in order to prevent the
feared ‘injury’ to the child, parents should give up the
uses of IVF that pose those risks, I am of the opinion
that a better solution is to ensure the efficacy and
safety measures of clinical and laboratory practices in
order to reduce the burden of multiple pregnancy.
Notably, Robertson (2004) offers no explanation
pertaining to the definitions and assessment of risks,
harm and feared injury to the child that should prevent
would-be parents from using IVF and assisted
reproduction treatments. Consequently, this might
lead to an argument that giving up the treatment
merely to prevent injury is not necessarily sufficient.
an assessment of the risk of harm to the child should
be made, alongside ensuring safety measures are in
place in clinical and laboratory practices in IVF
legislation in Malaysia to ensure that the future IVF
children are afforded the maximum chance of a
healthy start in life.
Studies from the UK and Australia also suggest
that some drugs which are used to stimulate women’s
ovaries to produce multiple oocytes in IVF
procedures increase the risk of serious birth
impairments in the resulting children. Other long-
term studies have been undertaken to show the kinds
and rates of physical diseases and abnormalities
incurred by children born of IVF technology. A
cohort study shows that the rate of birth defects in IVF
children rises to around 50 compared to 35 in non-
IVF children, out of every 1000 conceived babies
(Derbyshire: 2010). The evidence also indicates that
the children born as a result of this treatment are two
or three times more likely to suffer serious diseases
such as spina bifida, heart disease and diabetes
compared to naturally conceived children. More
recently, a study has indicated that the rate of multiple
births and the risks they bring to women and the
potential children is disproportionate for all types of
fertility treatment, but especially IVF. In order to
reduce the harm and risks of IVF procedures to the
resulting children, a detailed and proper scrutiny of
IVF procedures is urgently required along with the
adoption of a regulatory framework. Peters (2004)
voices his concerns regarding the issue of harm raised
by the use of IVF technology, stating that:
Because the welfare of future people
matters, we all have a prima facie obligation
to avoid the infliction of unjustified harm on
Regulating In-Vitro Fertilisation Treatment in Malaysia: Obligations to Protect and Assist the Parties
71
our future children. And because their
welfare matters, lawmakers must take their
interests into account when deciding
whether to regulate a risky reproductive
procedure.
Based on Peters’ arguments it is clear that states
have responsibilities to safeguard potential children
against the harmful consequences of assisted
reproductive procedures (Peters: 2004). As of yet,
there is no standardised legislation in Malaysia to
protect IVF children from the risks of the procedures.
Rosato (2004) believes that law is the only way to
prevent this harm. She further explains that although
there is self-regulation provided by medical
professional organisations to govern fertility
practices, the system is insufficient to prevent
harmful and unethical activities. To justify this, the
assessment of harm in this legal context must strike a
delicate balance by protecting children while
respecting the parents’ autonomy and consent to IVF.
Harm to individuals and society must be a real
potential harm, although not necessarily
demonstrable and imminent as argued by Dworkin
(1978). Although the risk of harm to the child need
not be imminent, it should be at least significant and
serious. An undefined fear, or one that would not
result in serious injury, is insufficient to be used as a
justification to restrict access to IVF. There is a clear
indication that the harm posed to IVF children by
multiple births, miscarriage and birth defects is
significant and serious. As previously mentioned, in
the UK, for example, the use of multiple embryos has
been restricted since January 2009 in recognition of
the risks posed, through the introduction of SET by
the HFEA.
Since there are risks and harms associated with
IVF, particularly during and after the treatment, there
should be legislation to protect both mothers and the
potential children because the existing guideline in
Malaysia currently is inadequate to provide such
protection. Although these issues have been
addressed in the current Malaysian Guideline,
unfortunately they are not being observed and
updated appropriately, so consequently, the harms in
IVF continue to occur with no protection. It is
arguable that on the basis of the same reasoning
pertaining to the potential for harm that has been
acted upon in the UK, a law is required to ensure
compliance with the safety features contained in the
Guidelines. In a similar vein, Malaysia should adopt
similar safeguards such as the introduction of SET in
all clinics. Such safeguards will also help to alleviate
concerns regarding the roles of medical practitioners
and the State authorities in allowing parents with high
risk factors to undergo IVF, knowing that it would
pose the potential of real harm for the future child.
3.3 Why the Guideline of the MMC is
Insufficient
There are several reasons why the current MMC
Guideline in Malaysia is insufficient to govern the
provision of IVF technology in Malaysia. The
Guideline does not have the force of law behind it and
therefore is open to interpretation in the clinical
context, which means that it can be disregarded. This
has potentially deleterious consequences. Patients
may be offered treatments that are ill suited to their
clinical needs and the lack of legal enforceability of
the Guideline may lead to a failure to safeguard the
interests of the patients and the potential child,
whether these interests are medical, cultural or
religious. Hence, it is arguable that the lack of
enforcement in the Guideline can seriously affect the
quality of the IVF services provided in Malaysia.
Further, private IVF clinics are under no
obligation at all to abide by the recommendations in
the Guideline, allowing them to prioritise the obvious
financial advantages that accompany the provision of
treatment to couples from outside Malaysia, even if
such patients do not conform to the religious and
cultural concerns expressed in the Guideline. For
example, the MMC Guideline clearly stipulates that
ART should only be offered to married couples due
to the prevailing religious and cultural norms of
Malaysians, but the same condition is not
incorporated into the private hospitals’ guidelines,
with the result that IVF treatment is offered to any
couple regardless of their marital status, provided that
they have financial means to get the treatment.
In this environment, alongside concerns about
parity of access to treatment, it is important to ensure
that the treatments that are provided meet clinically
and ethically accepted standards. At present this
cannot be guaranteed because of the lack of effective
regulation. The MMC Guideline only provides that
the medical practitioners should have an effective
system for monitoring and assessing laboratory and
clinical practice, but the way in which the accepted
standard of clinical practice and the level of
satisfaction for the assessment should be interpreted
are not explained, thus leaving room for the question
as to what exactly the standards means. Schenker and
Shushan advocate that due to the fact that there is no
adequate supervision in IVF, some kind of quality
control should be urgently instituted in all clinics
offering IVF in Malaysia, since the technologies
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involve such complicated and sensitive issues
(Schenker and Shushan: 1996).
There is of course no certainty that the enactment
of a statute modelled on other legislation such as the
UK’s Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 1990
would provide standardisation, safe and effective
treatments, or ensure equality of access. However,
given the above, it seems likely that if such a law were
enacted and properly enforced it would be an
improvement on the current position.
4 CONCLUSIONS
In prioritising the health of the woman and the
resulting child, I advocate that the risks and harms to
Malaysian society are of equal concern and it is
appropriate for the Government to call for legislation.
It is my contention that if the protection of these
identified groups is dealt with conscientiously, and
new laws are introduced, this will lead not only to
more effective control of IVF technology but will also
help to achieve the intended goal of introducing
robust and appropriate IVF legislation in Malaysia.
To sum up, it is concluded that only through the
enactment of legislation which accurately reflects the
cultural and religious values and the shared morality
within Malaysian society, will the Government instil
public confidence in medical law in Malaysia,
particularly in the areas of assisted reproduction and
IVF.
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