Surrogacy overcomes legal hurdles as market booms

Surrogacy overcomes legal hurdles as market booms


At just 19 years old, Amanda Roman suffered a stroke, prompting her to be on a variety of medications, including blood thinners, and eventually leading to a uterine ablation, meaning that she would no longer be able to have a period.

This meant if Roman wanted to have a genetic link to her child, she would have to use a surrogate.

“When I met my husband, it was kind of like off the bat when we were dating, like we started having these conversations, and I told him we would have to use a surrogate if we ever wanted a child,” Roman told the Washington Examiner. 

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Just months after getting married in 2019, Roman and her husband began IVF treatment and froze nine embryos that

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