Surrogacy India - Congratulation Anna and Eric - Newborn baby twin boys! Dream do come through with Weecare Surrogacy USA http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Surrogacy India - Congratulation Anna and Eric
Surrogacy India - Congratulation Anna and Eric - Newborn baby twin boys! Dream do come through with Weecare Surrogacy USA http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Surrogacy India
Surrogacy India - Congratulation to Ryan and Eric - Newborn baby twin boys! Dream do come through with Weecare Surrogacy USA http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/

Sunday, October 28, 2012
Australians head overseas for surrogacy
AUSTRALIANS are increasingly turning to surrogacy arrangements in India to fulfil their desire to have children, new research shows.
Hundreds of Australians are choosing India as their destination for commercial surrogacy, followed by Thailand and the United States, rather than opt for a legal arrangement in Australia which bans compensating surrogates.
Research by Surrogacy Australia, an Australian agency involved in international surrogacy, found there were 200 recorded surrogacy births in India to Australian couples so far this year, compared to 179 in 2011, 86 in 2010 and 47 in 2009.
The research included Australian government statistics, data collected from 14 large overseas surrogacy agencies and a survey of 217 Australians.
READ MORE...
Surrogacy India - Positively WeeCare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Hundreds of Australians are choosing India as their destination for commercial surrogacy, followed by Thailand and the United States, rather than opt for a legal arrangement in Australia which bans compensating surrogates.
Research by Surrogacy Australia, an Australian agency involved in international surrogacy, found there were 200 recorded surrogacy births in India to Australian couples so far this year, compared to 179 in 2011, 86 in 2010 and 47 in 2009.
The research included Australian government statistics, data collected from 14 large overseas surrogacy agencies and a survey of 217 Australians.
READ MORE...
Surrogacy India - Positively WeeCare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Fair-skinned Indian women paid £1,000 more to be surrogates than others
Fair-skinned high caste women are being paid £1,000 more to be surrogate mothers
than their dark-skinned, low-caste rivals, an Indian study has found.

India has become a medical tourism
destination for fertility treatment and surrogacy among both childless Western
and Indian couples from around the world.
But according to researchers surrogate mothers still face discrimination over
their caste, skin colour and attractiveness despite the fact that the foetus
they carry has none of their own genetic material.
Read more...
Surrogacy India - Positively WeeCare Surrogacy http:// www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Read more...
Surrogacy India - Positively WeeCare Surrogacy http://
Monday, October 22, 2012
Commercial surrogacy grows in India
They never wanted to have a child, until they did. And then they couldn't.
For four years, this San Carlos couple struggled with infertility. Now, their child is growing inside a woman they have never met, in India, a country they have never seen.
This is the story of Jennifer Benito-Kowalski, 39, and Steve Kowalski, 40, who are trying to start a family 8,200 miles from the Bay Area.
It is also the story of a developing nation where hundreds of women, for a price, are opening their wombs to fulfill the dreams of aspiring parents around the world.
Commercial surrogacy became legal in India a decade ago in an effort to stimulate medical tourism, the emerging practice of travel across international borders to obtain cheaper health care. The Confederation of Indian Industry estimates the market will generate $2.3 billion this year.

Read more: .....
Positively Weecare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
For four years, this San Carlos couple struggled with infertility. Now, their child is growing inside a woman they have never met, in India, a country they have never seen.
This is the story of Jennifer Benito-Kowalski, 39, and Steve Kowalski, 40, who are trying to start a family 8,200 miles from the Bay Area.
It is also the story of a developing nation where hundreds of women, for a price, are opening their wombs to fulfill the dreams of aspiring parents around the world.
Commercial surrogacy became legal in India a decade ago in an effort to stimulate medical tourism, the emerging practice of travel across international borders to obtain cheaper health care. The Confederation of Indian Industry estimates the market will generate $2.3 billion this year.
Read more: .....
Positively Weecare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Thursday, October 18, 2012
Origins of Love: the reality and ethics of reproductive tourism
Assisted reproductive technology has grown significantly in Australia as in other countries and hundreds of thousands of children have now been born because of it around the world. Most of us know people who’ve had children this way.
But there’s another side to assisted reproduction with which Australians are less familiar. You may know that it’s often difficult for infertile couples to find suitable egg donors if a woman cannot produce her own eggs or if her eggs are not able to be fertilised.
And it’s even harder for couples to find a surrogate mother if they can’t have a child themselves, or they want to have a child who is biologically related to both of them (especially as payments and other rewards have been prohibited in Australia).
You may have heard of “reproductive tourism”, where people travel to another country to undertake procedures that Australian women may be unwilling to undertake, or that would be unlawful in Australia. But most of us know little about the experiences of people in those countries who are drawn into these activities.

Read more...
Positively Weecare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
But there’s another side to assisted reproduction with which Australians are less familiar. You may know that it’s often difficult for infertile couples to find suitable egg donors if a woman cannot produce her own eggs or if her eggs are not able to be fertilised.
And it’s even harder for couples to find a surrogate mother if they can’t have a child themselves, or they want to have a child who is biologically related to both of them (especially as payments and other rewards have been prohibited in Australia).
You may have heard of “reproductive tourism”, where people travel to another country to undertake procedures that Australian women may be unwilling to undertake, or that would be unlawful in Australia. But most of us know little about the experiences of people in those countries who are drawn into these activities.

Read more...
Positively Weecare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
How much would YOU pay to be a mother?
On Saturday, the Daily Mail told the story of a British couple who spent £20,000 having a baby using an Indian surrogate. It revealed the lengths some couples will go to for a child and the huge costs they face. So what is the price of having a baby? Here, three women reveal how much they spent to have their children.
Read more:.....
Surrogacy in India - Positively WeeCare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
Read more:.....
Surrogacy in India - Positively WeeCare Surrogacy http://www.weecaresurrogacy.com/
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