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Legal principles and essential surrogacy cases every practitioner should know

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fertnstert.2020.03.015Get rights and content
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Gestational surrogacy, made possible with the introduction of in vitro fertilization, has expanded family building options while introducing novel challenges to established legal principles involving constitutional, contract, and family law as well as duty of care and negligence. Both legislatures and courts have grappled with how to apply these sometimes-competing areas of law to protect participants and professionals, and to create legally secure families. This article explores the following: the Constitutionally protected rights of privacy and reproductive autonomy of gestational surrogates; Contract Law principles that govern surrogacy contracts; the varied ways states have extended Family Law to establish legally recognized parent−child relationships between intended parents and children born to gestational surrogates; and the legal duties of care medical professionals owe to their patients.

Key Words

Gestational surrogacy
law
contracts
negligence
malpractice

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S.L.C. has nothing to disclose. M.A.E. has nothing to disclose. A.A. has nothing to disclose.