Statutory Instruments
1991 No. 1540
HUMAN FERTILISATION AND EMBRYOLOGY
The Human Fertilisation and Embryology (Statutory Storage Period) Regulations 1991
Laid before Parliament
11th July 1991
Coming into force
1st August 1991
The Secretary of State, in exercise of the powers conferred by sections 14(5) and 45 of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 1990(), and of all other powers enabling him in that behalf, hereby makes the following Regulations:
Citation and commencement
1. These Regulations may be cited as the Human Fertilisation and Embryology (Statutory Storage Period) Regulations 1991 and shall come into force on 1st August 1991.
Extension of statutory storage period for gametes
2.—(1) In the circumstances specified in paragraph (2) below, section 14(3) of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 1990 (statutory storage period in respect of gametes) shall have effect in respect of any gametes as if for ten years there were substituted the appropriate period specified in the Schedule to these Regulations.
(2) The circumstances referred to in paragraph (1) are that the gametes were provided by a person—
(a)whose fertility since providing them has or is likely to become, in the written opinion of a registered medical practitioner, significantly impaired,
(b)who was aged under 45 on the date on which the gametes were provided, and
(c)who does not consent to the gametes' being used for the purpose of providing treatment services to persons other than that person, or that person and another together, and never has so consented while the gametes were ones to which this regulation applied.
William Waldegrave
One of Her Majesty’s Principal Secretaries of State
8th July 1991
Regulation 2(1)
SCHEDULE
The appropriate period mentioned in Regulation 2(1) in respect of any gametes is the period of years specified in the second column of this Schedule corresponding to the age, specified in the first column of this Schedule, of the person who provided the gametes on the date on which they were provided.
Column 1 | Column 2 |
---|
Age of person providing gametes on date when they were provided: | Appropriate period (in years): |
---|
16 or under | 39 |
17 | 38 |
18 | 37 |
19 | 36 |
20 | 35 |
21 | 34 |
22 | 33 |
23 | 32 |
24 | 31 |
25 | 30 |
26 | 29 |
27 | 28 |
28 | 27 |
29 | 26 |
30 | 25 |
31 | 24 |
32 | 23 |
33 | 22 |
34 | 21 |
35 | 20 |
36 | 19 |
37 | 18 |
38 | 17 |
39 | 16 |
40 | 15 |
41 | 14 |
42 | 13 |
43 | 12 |
44 | 11 |
Explanatory Note
These Regulations provide that where a person who has provided gametes becomes infertile, or is likely to, the gametes may (in the circumstances laid down in the Regulations) be stored for a period longer than the period of 10 years for which gametes may ordinarily be stored. The storage period can be extended in this way only if the person who provided the gametes was aged under 45 at the time.
Gametes stored for an extended period in accordance with these Regulations may not be used for providing treatment services except to the person who provided them, or that person and another together.
The usual 10-year maximum storage period is laid down by section 14(3) of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 1990. The extended period is specified in the Schedule to the Regulations and depends upon how old the person was when the gametes were provided.