Usually, the conflict will be the mother felt in love with the baby and want to keep the baby with her.
Second, there are one of them (surrogate mother or couple) who didn't feel satisfied.
Like, the truth was completely different with the agreement.
Hope it help Save
Sue A Meinke has written: 'Surrogate motherhood' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Legal status, laws, Moral and ethical aspects, Moral and ethical aspects of Surrogate mothers, Surrogate mothers
There are many agencies you can work with to learn how to be a surrogate mother. The best agency I have found is Surrogate Mothers Inc.
15 years
Usually 18 to 30
Surrogate mothers are used more frequently in modern pregnancies than in contemporary births. Altough the percentage would be over fifty percent in modern pregnancies there are still a higher number of births altogether (when considering all types of birth) which do not use surrogate mothers.
They often get depressed after seeing the child handed over to the other parents
Elizabeth Baxter has written: 'Surrogate mothers--the legal issues'
Hester Kaplan has written: 'Kinship Theory' -- subject(s): Fiction, Mothers and daughters, Surrogate mothers, Pregnant women
Nope, no rights to the child at all after birth.
Kathleen K. Bach has written: 'Research guide, surrogate motherhood' -- subject(s): Contracts, Legal research, Legal status, laws, Surrogate mothers
I believe that it is less than 1%. Very, very low.
In the wild, absolutely not! In a zoo, maybe, but they'd be taken care of by their human surrogate mothers.