OBJECTIVE: To assess whether cancer patients receive timely information on adoption and third-party reproduction and whether discrimination exists in the system. METHODS: A convenience sample of 11 cancer organizations, 6 international adoption agencies, and 7 adoption specialists was informally surveyed by phone, by e-mail, and in person. RESULTS: Cancer organizations did not know whether cancer is a barrier to adoption; what a survivor needs to do to adopt; or whether or not a cancer survivor should disclose their cancer history to the adoption agency, home study worker, etc. They could not identify resources for a survivor experiencing discrimination or adoption agencies that are cancer friendly. They did not know whether a survivor should adopt domestically or internationally to increase the likelihood of success. Adoption agencies identified their chief concern as the welfare of the child and were reluctant to discuss how a cancer survivor would be viewed as a potential adoptive parent. CONCLUSIONS: Cancer patients lack immediate access to information about adoption and may face discrimination in domestic and international adoption.
CITATION STYLE
Rosen, A. (2005). Third-party reproduction and adoption in cancer patients. Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Monographs, (34), 91–93. https://doi.org/10.1093/jncimonographs/lgi021
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