Part I. Oocyte Donation
Chapter 1. Medical Implications of Oocyte Donation
Joao Correia De Pinho and William E. Gibbons
Chapter 2. Oocyte Donation: Legal Aspects
Margaret E. Swain
Chapter 3. Oocyte Donation: Psychological Aspects
Linda D. Applegarth
Chapter 4. Oocyte Donation: Ethical Aspects
Michelle L. McGowan and Leah Wilson
Part II. Gestational Surrogacy
Chapter 5. Gestational Carrier: Medical Aspects
James M. Goldfarb
Chapter 6. Surrogacy and Gestational Carrier Arrangements: Legal Aspects
Margaret E. Swain
Chapter 7. Use of Gestational Carriers: Psychological Aspects
Dorothy A. Greenfeld
Chapter 8. The Ethics of Hiring a Gestational Carrier
Kavita Shah
Part III. Embryo Donation
Chapter 9. Embryo Donation: Medical Aspects
Bonnie G. Patel and Brooke V. Rossi
Chapter 10. Embryo Donation: Legal Aspects
Susan Crockin and Lauren Nussbaum
Chapter 11. Embryo Donation: Psychological Aspects
Lindsay Childress-Beatty
Chapter 12. Embryo Donation: Ethical Issues
Stephanie O. Corley and Jessica Wilen Berg
Part IV. Sperm Donation
Chapter 13. Donor Insemination
Brooke V. Rossi
Chapter 14. Sperm Donation: Legal Aspects
Stephanie O. Corley and Maxwell Mehlman
Chapter 15. Sperm Donation: Psychological Aspects
William D. Petok
Chapter 16. Sperm Donation: Ethical Aspects
Julie R. Severson
Part V. Posthumous Reproduction
Chapter 17. Medical Aspects of Posthumous Reproduction
Christopher Brede and Edmund Sabanegh, Jr.
Chapter 18. Ethical Implications of Posthumous Reproduction
Valarie K. Blake and Hannah L. Kushnick
Part VI. Religion and Third-Party Reproduction
Chapter 19. Hagar's Child: Theology, Ethics, and the Third Party in Emerging Reproductive Technology
Laurie Zoloth and Alyssa A. Henning
Part VII. Navigating Third-Party Reproduction
Chapter 20. Choosing Egg Donors and Gestational Carriers: Avoiding the Pitfalls
Mindy Berkson
About the Author: James Goldfarb, MD, MBA, is the Director of Fertility Services and In Vitro Fertilization at University Hospitals of Cleveland. He is also a Clinical Professor of Reproductive Biology at the Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve University. Since the 80's, Dr. Goldfarb has been at the forefront of third party reproduction. His infertility program was responsible for the first in-vitro fertilization birth in Ohio in 1983 and the world's first in-vitro fertilization/surrogate birth in 1986. He is immediate past president of the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technologies (SART) and, through his association with SART and his active clinical practice, he has been very involved with recent issues regarding all aspects of third party reproduction.