Madhur Hamine: IVF Is Not Medical Negligence, It Is a National Emergency
Madhur Hamine, Managing Director at Oospheere IVF Services Pvt Ltd, shared a post on LinkedIn:
“This Isn’t Medical Negligence. It’s a National Emergency.
Imagine this.
Months of injections. Endless hope. Countless prayers.
Then a DNA test tells you…
The baby you carried is not biologically yours.
No parent should ever have to ask:
“Whose child was I carrying?”
That single question should shake every policymaker, regulator and healthcare leader in India.
Recent reports have raised deeply disturbing concerns about alleged embryo mix-ups, clinics reportedly operating despite registration issues, poor traceability, weak documentation and serious regulatory lapses in parts of the IVF ecosystem. If even a fraction of these allegations prove true, this is not just the failure of one clinic—it is the failure of an entire system.
As someone who has spent decades working in IVF, I say this unequivocally:
IVF is built on trust. Once trust is lost, the entire industry suffers.
Patients don’t understand laboratory protocols.
They understand only one question:
“Is this really my child?”
If that answer can ever become uncertain, we have crossed every ethical boundary.
India urgently needs:
- Immediate suspension of IVF centres operating without valid statutory approvals.
- Nationwide forensic audits of embryo, sperm and egg traceability.
- Mandatory barcode/RFID-based digital chain-of-custody for every gamete and embryo.
- CCTV monitoring of all critical embryology procedures with secure regulatory access.
- Annual independent laboratory quality and compliance audits.
- A National IVF Patient Safety Authority with investigative powers.
- A confidential national reporting system for IVF errors and near misses.
- Strict penalties for misleading success-rate advertisements.
- Criminal liability—not just financial penalties—for deliberate violations involving embryo handling, identity errors or record tampering.
- Fast-track legal mechanisms to deliver justice to affected families.
Every IVF patient should have the legal right to know whether a clinic is registered, receive complete treatment records, understand every major procedure, and demand accountability without fear.
India is rapidly becoming one of the world’s largest IVF markets.
But growth without governance is dangerous.
An IVF laboratory is not just another healthcare facility.
It is where families place their future.
Every embryo represents someone’s child.
Every lapse destroys more than a pregnancy.
It destroys trust, identity and sometimes an entire family forever.
The time for cosmetic reforms is over.
India needs the world’s strongest IVF patient safety framework—not after the next tragedy, but before it.”

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