Doctors in Turkey do not permit elective gender selection during aneuploidy genetic testing due to strict national laws. Medical professionals only use sex selection to prevent severe sex-linked genetic disorders. This regulation applies to all patients regardless of their country of origin.
- Legal framework: Turkish laws strictly prohibit choosing embryo sex for social reasons or family balancing.
- Medical exceptions: Selection is allowed only for diagnosed, sex-linked conditions like Hemophilia or Muscular Dystrophy.
- Report restrictions: Laboratories often omit sex chromosomes from patient reports to prevent elective embryo selection.
- Selection criteria: Clinicians like Dr. Ebru Ozturk Oksuz focus entirely on embryo health and chromosomal count.
Bookimed Expert Insight: While elective selection is prohibited, Turkey offers high-level genetic expertise for chromosomal health. Specialists like Prof. Dr. Yavuz Aydin and Prof. Dr. Nilgun Turhan are members of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology (ESHRE). This ensures that while gender selection is restricted, the screening for aneuploidy meets the highest international medical standards.
Patient Consensus: Patients note that even when sex is technically visible on lab reports, physicians focus selection strictly on embryo quality. Many find it vital to verify a clinic specific policy in writing before starting the stimulation process. Realizations often occur that clinical decisions are based entirely on which embryo is the most viable.