For best experience please turn on javascript and use a modern browser!
You are using a browser that is no longer supported by Microsoft. Please upgrade your browser. The site may not present itself correctly if you continue browsing.
In the Dutch Journal of Health Law (Tijdschrift voor Gezondheidsrecht), Corrette Ploem and Merel Spaander, of the Law Centre for Health and Life, wrote more about the legal framework for the postmortem use of embryos in the Netherlands.

The court in The Hague recently ruled in a case in which a woman wanted to use artificial reproduction after her husband's death. The problem, however, was that the Dutch clinic intended to destroy the embryos because her husband had not given written consent for postmortem use, a requirement of the Dutch Embryo Act. That this had not happened, however, was due to the fertility clinic that had failed to inform the couple of this possibility. In this article, Corrette Ploem and Merel Spaander delve into the Dutch rules governing postmortem reproduction, reflect on them and suggest how they could possibly be improved. 

Prof. mr. M.C. (Corrette) Ploem

Faculty of Law

Gezondheidsrecht

M.M. (Merel) Spaander MSc LLM

Faculty of Law

Gezondheidsrecht