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HEALTH

Danish sperm banks want end to ban on home insemination

Women should be allowed to inseminate themselves at home with screened sperm they have procured from a sperm bank, according to three of Denmark's sperm banks who want to see an end to the strict legislation that bans this.

Danish sperm bank Cryos
File photo of Danish sperm bank Cryos in Aarhus. Cryos is one of three Danish sperm banks that are calling for an end to the ban on home insemination. Henning Bagger / AFP

According to Cryos International, European Sperm Bank and SellmerDiers, more women are contacting private sperm donors to avoid being treated at fertility clinics, Danish daily Jyllands-Posten reported.

“We have a vision to help women have the children they want, and we think the law pushes women into a market where neither the women nor the children are helped,” Helle Sejersen Myrthue, director of Cryos International told the paper. 

A new law came into force in July 2018, preventing sperm banks from sending sperm directly to private addresses so that women could inseminate themselves at home. 

According to the Tissue Act, insemination must take place in approved fertility clinics, hospital wards, or by authorised health staff.

Jyllands-Posten reported that the ban had created a market for the private exchange of semen on closed internet forums and groups on Facebook, for example.

The sperm banks are concerned about this as such sperm would not screened for hereditary diseases, for example.

But Bugge Nøhr, chief physician and head of clinic at the Fertility Clinic at Herlev Hospital said women should also be aware that they are twice as likely to conceive when insemination is carried out a clinic rather than at home.

The Ministry of Health has been discussing the proposal with sperm banks and the Danish Patient Safety Authority (Styrelsen for Patientsikkerhed), but a number of matters need to be considered before the ministry will move forward with it, the paper reported.

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DANISH CITIZENSHIP

Parliament passes bill making it easier for foreign spouses to come to Denmark

Denmark's parliament on Thursday voted through a law which will make it easier for citizens to bring foreign spouses to Denmark, by, among other things, halving the financial security they need to provide.

Parliament passes bill making it easier for foreign spouses to come to Denmark

MPs from the Social Democrat, Liberal and Moderate parties – the three parties in Denmark’s ruling coalition – all voted in favour of the bill, as did those from the Red Green Alliance, Socialist Left, Social Liberal and Alternative parties.

MPs from the Denmark Democrats, Danish People’s Party, Liberal Alliance, and Conservative parties all voted against, meaning the bill passed with 78 votes in favour and 29 against.

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In a statement posted on its website on Thursday, the Danish Immigration Service said that the rules would be applied to applications made after April 11th, and would start to apply from July 1st. 

When the new law comes into force, the bankgaranti that Danes who want to bring their foreign spouses to Denmark need to leave with their municipality, will be halved from 114,000 kroner to 57,000 kroner (both 2024 level). 

The Danish language requirements for Danes who apply for family reunification for their partners will also be “considered fulfilled” if the Danish partner has spent five years or more in full-time employment or been self-employed in a job that has “significantly involved communication in Danish”. 

Formerly, they needed to provide academic records which some Danes had either lost or never received. 

The new law will give Danes returning to Denmark following several years abroad, the same rights to bring their families to Denmark as foreigners who have received residency via a work permit, so long as the job they have received in Denmark would qualify them for a work permit under one of Denmark’s many work permit schemes. 

Finally, in a section designed to stop the measure seem like a relaxation of immigration rules, the bill changes the law so that anyone charged or indicted for a certain type of offences, will in future not be issued with permanent residence.

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