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Singapore’s egg-freezing ban forces women to head abroad for fertility treatment
- A growing number of women have been travelling overseas to get their eggs frozen, as people in the work-obsessed city state increasingly delay having children
- Now calls are growing for authorities to loosen the rules on egg freezing in a bid to help boost one of the world’s lowest birth rates
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Agence France-Pressein Singapore
With a busy job that left little time to think about starting a family, Erica decided to sidestep Singapore’s ban on egg freezing for a chance to have children later in life.
The advertising executive is among a growing number of women travelling overseas to get their eggs frozen, as people in the work-obsessed city state increasingly delay having children.
Now calls are growing for authorities to loosen the rules in a bid to help boost one of the world’s lowest birth rates.
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“It’s quite unfair to women here,” Erica, who used a pseudonym, said of the current policy on egg freezing.
“It doesn’t give women in Singapore the chance to have an opportunity to give birth in their 40s, and therefore they feel like they would have to settle in their 30s because time is not on their side,” the 41-year-old added.
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