Woman with brain tumor fights for medical records from sperm donor

Woman with brain tumor fights for medical records from sperm donor
Woman with brain tumor fights for medical records from sperm donor
Courtesy of Saliyl Dotson

(NEW YORK) — Laura High has a brain tumor, but she says that’s not her defining characteristic.

High is a stand-up comedian whose routine consists of jokes about being a millennial and living in New York City. High also jokes about being a donor-conceived child and her search for her biological father.

“I’m what happens when a woman needs to become a mother and a man needs $200,” High joked at a recent appearance in New York City.

Behind all the giggles, High said she is fighting for concrete action to help protect donor-conceived people and provide them access to their medical records.

“It’s shocking to learn and to find out how many donor-conceived people [there are] especially in my age group, who have never been told, and who only found out by accident via a DNA test,” said High, 34, referring to donor-conceived people who discover their biological parent only through a DNA test.

High said her parents told her when she was 14 that she was conceived using donor sperm.

She took her own DNA test many years later, after she got engaged, because she said she feared that the man she loved might be her half-brother.

“I live in the same city that my donor was donating, so chances are the majority of my siblings are probably in New York City,” High said. “I have no idea if my neighbor is a sibling. I have no clue.”

High said she discovered she and her fiancé were not related — but through the DNA test, she found three of her biological siblings.

All of the siblings had similar genetic health issues. In High’s case, she was diagnosed with a brain tumor in 2016.

Without medical records, High said doctors can’t prove it is due to a genetic issue, but it’s suspected given her biological siblings’ own medical records.

When High found her father, she said he refused to give her and her siblings access to his medical records, which High claims could have helped catch her brain tumor sooner.

High said she and her siblings all have hormonal disorders that she said, in her case, put her at risk of developing her brain tumor. She said she was diagnosed when she was just 13.

“I’m very lucky I caught it in time before I needed surgery, and before I started trying to have children, because the tumor, while it is still in my head, essentially makes me infertile,” High said. “It’s taking a year for it to [decrease in size], so thank God I caught it now.”

As she continues to undergo treatment, High is continuing to fight for access to her own medical records and to pave the way for other donor-conceived people.

A bill proposed in High’s home state of New York would require disclosures from donors on diagnosed medical conditions, family medical conditions, doctors seen, names of schools attended and criminal felony convictions.

The bill, called the Donor Conceived Person Protection Act, would require fertility clinics to give donor-conceived people access to their updated medical records.

“It’s not going to just save my life, it’s also going to potentially save my children’s lives,” High said, adding that donor-conceived people “are just asking for the same knowledge you would get if you knew your parents.”

The fight for donor-conceived rights

New York State Sen. Patrick Gallivan, a Democrat, is the sponsor of the bill, S7602A. He said he believes most people are not aware of what he described as the loose regulations that currently exist around the fertility industry.

“People have the same reaction I did,” Gallivan told ABC News. “So far, they’re completely shocked.”

Gallivan explained that state requirements vary, but in New York, there is no requirement for screening for mental health, physical health or criminal records in order to be a donor.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration requires that sperm donors be tested within a week of their donation. Donations are tested for nine sexually transmitted diseases, but certain donors could be tested for more, according to a 2020 FDA pamphlet.

Gallivan’s bill would create action against fertility fraud and a doctor would not use reproductive tissue from a donor if the recipient did not consent. If a doctor used a donation that was not the one a client consented to use, it would become a crime of aggravated assault, according to the bill.

In High’s case, she claims the sperm donation her mother received was not the one her mother and father selected. She said she later found that her biological father was a colleague and friend of her mother’s OB-GYN.

High has advocated for Gallivan’s bill on TikTok, where she has more than 10 million likes on her platform.

Gallivan said his bill would help provide structure to New York fertility procedures. Currently, for example, it is not illegal for a doctor to switch out a promised sperm donation with any other donation or a doctor’s own sample.

The bill also would give a definition of professional misconduct for physicians, physician’s assistants and specialist assistants. Fertility clinics would have to disclose donor information such as medical records, prior felonies and previous doctor visits, according to Gallivan.

The bill would require that information would have to be updated as children become adults and donors find more potential medical issues as they age.

New York State Sen. George Borrello, a Republican, co-sponsored the bill and said there is no reason for donor-conceived children to suffer mental and physical health issues when genetic testing and background checks are widely available.

“If you buy a vehicle, that used car that has some problems, you have recourse,” Borrello said. “In this, you’re talking about a human being, a life.”

Gallivan and Borrello said that no one from the fertility industry has reached out to their offices directly, but emphasized that this area in protecting children is one of the few bipartisan efforts they think everyone can support.

The bill is currently in the New York Senate’s Health Committee, where Gallivan and Borrello say they are pushing their colleagues to see the necessity of this bill.

While there are other bills around the U.S. that deal with donor anonymity, this is the first proposed bill that would directly provide access to medical records for donor-conceived people.

ABC News reached out to six fertility clinics in the New York area for comment on the bill. None have responded.

Richard Vaughn, the founder of International Fertility Law Group, said that the New York bill is a good start, but that laws need to look at the fertility industry as a whole.

“The issue with donor-conceived persons and their right to know is a bit of a love triangle,” Vaughn said.

He said the donor-conceived children, the donors and the parents all have to be represented, but the bill only looks at protection for the children.

“I don’t think anybody disagrees with the part that it’s so important that donor-conceived kids have accurate information about their medical history and their genetic heritage,” Vaughn said. “So the trick is balancing all three of those, and in the middle, you’ve got medical providers.”

Vaughn said in his practice, about half of parents choose to tell their kids if they are donor-conceived.

Vaughn said the issue is balancing the health of the family with the accessibility of donors. He said there is a fear that shifting to making more personal information about donors accessible would cause fewer people to donate.

“All donations should be open,” Vaughn said. “That’s healthy for the donor-conceived children, it’s healthy for the parents to know that this isn’t something you really have to hide.”

Georgetown Law professor Susan Crockin, who specializes in fertility ethics, said she believes New York’s law could be the start of a national trend.

She said she hopes new laws don’t go too far to place an “impossible burden” on providers to fully investigate every donor.

“My biggest hope is that we have laws that are reasonable, and that provide more assurances, that donors don’t shrink back from it, but that we give everybody more background and more context for who they are,” Crockin added.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Police release footage of suspects wanted in livestreamed robbery of Brooklyn bishop

Police release footage of suspects wanted in livestreamed robbery of Brooklyn bishop
Police release footage of suspects wanted in livestreamed robbery of Brooklyn bishop
NYPD

(NEW YORK) — Police released footage of three suspects wanted in connection with the armed robbery of a Brooklyn, New York bishop during a livestream of his service.

Bishop Lamor Whitehead said he and his wife were robbed of “hundreds of thousands” in jewelry, including his wedding band, during a targeted incident on Sunday at his church, Leaders of Tomorrow International Ministry.

The New York Police Department released surveillance footage late Tuesday that shows the suspects, dressed in all black and wearing masks, crossing the street and entering the location shortly after 11 a.m. Sunday. Police said Wednesday there were no updates in the case.

Footage of the livestream, which is also part of the police investigation, shows the bishop saying “alright, alright” and lowering himself to the ground as one of the masked men enters the frame.

“When I see them come into the sanctuary with their guns, I told everybody, ‘Get down,'” Whitehead said in a video posted on Instagram. “I didn’t know if they wanted to shoot my church up or if they were coming for a robbery.”

Police said the men displayed firearms and stole a “large sum of jewelry” before fleeing in a white Mercedes.

Whitehead said that he chased after the suspects, whom he said had changed clothes and took their masks off, but ended up driving past them.

The bishop said the ministry was “traumatized” by the incident, and that a gun was pointed in the face of his 8-month-old baby. He has since offered a $50,000 reward for information leading to the “healthy” arrest of the three men.

“I don’t want nothing happening to these young men,” he said in a video posted on Instagram announcing the reward. “I want the law to deal with these people.”

He decried the robbery, saying that he would have helped the men if they needed it.

“I would have been able to show love,” he said.

Following news of the robbery, Whitehead has also defended himself against criticism over his “flashy” lifestyle.

“It’s not about me being flashy,” he said. “It’s about me purchasing what I want to purchase.”

“It’s my prerogative to purchase what I want to purchase,” he added.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Something to bark about: Trisha Yearwood celebrates one year of her Dottie’s Yard fund

Something to bark about: Trisha Yearwood celebrates one year of her Dottie’s Yard fund
Something to bark about: Trisha Yearwood celebrates one year of her Dottie’s Yard fund
Terry Wyatt/Getty Images for Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

Trisha Yearwood is celebrating the one-year anniversary of Dottie’s Yard, her non-profit fund dedicated to shelter dogs and cats, this week.

The country singer named her fund after one rescue dog in particular: Dottie, who spent 14 years with Trisha and her husband, fellow country star Garth Brooks, before her death. To honor Dottie’s memory, Trisha started the fund to support shelter pets and spearhead rescue efforts across the country.

On Wednesday, Trisha hopped on TalkShopLive to celebrate Dottie’s Yard’s anniversary and raise money for the cause with new sweatshirts from her Trisha Yearwood Pet Collection.

“Dottie was the ultimate rescue who showed up and changed everybody’s lives on our farm,” Trisha reflects. As a tribute to her, the singer’s organization is raising money to be dispersed across 27 shelters nationwide, in partnership with the Empty the Shelters adoption event campaign.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Beyoncé’s ‘Renaissance’ album leaks early

Beyoncé’s ‘Renaissance’ album leaks early
Beyoncé’s ‘Renaissance’ album leaks early
Carlijn Jacobs

Beyoncé’s Renaissance album has apparently leaked, just two days before its release.

According to Variety, “high-quality FLAC [Free Lossless Audio Codec] files that certainly sound like the album” were found online Wednesday. There were also social media posts that showed physical copies of the album for sale, apparently in European stores.

Beyoncé first revealed a new album was on the way last month. She has since followed up a reveal of the album’s cover art, track list, and collaborators, which include Drake, Nigerian singer Tems and producer Pharrell Williams.

Renaissance, which is the “Break My Soul” singer’s seventh studio album, is set to officially drop Friday. This will be Beyoncé’s first conventional solo album since 2016’s Lemonade.

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Doja Cat lists her Beverly Hills mansion for $2.5 million

Doja Cat lists her Beverly Hills mansion for .5 million
Doja Cat lists her Beverly Hills mansion for .5 million
Joe Scarnici/Getty Images for ELLE Magazine

Doja Cat is parting ways with the Beverly Hills mansion she picked up a little over a year ago, selling it for a cool $2.5 million.

People reports Doja made a few improvements to the two-story, midcentury home in the year and a half since she first purchased it. The first level contained two guest rooms and she has since updated one of them into a millennial pink powder room.

In other luxe amenities, the 8,000-square-foot property boasts a heated pool, backyard oasis, open gourmet kitchen, floor to ceiling windows, a balcony leading off the master bedroom, as well as a massive walk-in closet, a privacy gate and a state-of-the-art security system.

The home is being sold by Pardee Properties, which is offering a 3D tour of the location.  

 

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Brothers Osborne explain how CMA Fest helps them grow their career each year: “It really is like a snapshot”

Brothers Osborne explain how CMA Fest helps them grow their career each year: “It really is like a snapshot”
Brothers Osborne explain how CMA Fest helps them grow their career each year: “It really is like a snapshot”
ABC

If you’re wondering what to expect from Brothers Osborne’s performance on the CMA Fest TV special, the bandmates have a little hint to share.

“We were allowed to bring a prop from our live shows. Actually, two props,” says one-half of the band, John Osborne. “Without giving anything away — keep your eyes peeled for that. Props. Yeah.”

The special will feature the brother duo playing “Skeletons,” the title track from their latest album, on the big stadium stage. For Brothers Osborne, taking the main stage for their performance is a reminder of how far they’ve come, especially compared to the CMA Fests they played at the outset of their career.

“We’ve been playing it for a long time,” says TJ Osborne. “We’ve played these small little stages, sometimes three or four of them in a single day…labels got to see us, publishers got to see us, and then [we got to] make some fans.”

It’s a lot of work to build a grassroots fanbase like that, but the Brothers wouldn’t have it any other way. “Now to be here, playing the stadium, it really is like a snapshot — these different stages we would play and grow in,” TJ continues.

“It really puts into perspective, you know, what hard work can do,” he adds, “but also having these opportunities, how incredibly helpful they are.”

The CMA Fest special was filmed during the annual festival in downtown Nashville in June. Dierks Bentley and Elle King are hosting the show, which airs on August 3 at 8 p.m. ET on ABC. It will also be available to watch on Hulu the next day.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Imagine Dragons launches Instagram account dedicated to 10th anniversary of ‘Night Visions’

Imagine Dragons launches Instagram account dedicated to 10th anniversary of ‘Night Visions’
Imagine Dragons launches Instagram account dedicated to 10th anniversary of ‘Night Visions’
KIDinaKORNER/Interscope Records

Imagine Dragons has launched a new Instagram account dedicated to the upcoming 10th anniversary of the band’s 2012 debut album, Night Visions.

The account, which has the handle @DragonWagon, so far includes one post: a video of a young ID touring in a bus and rehearsing.

“Celebrating 10 years of Night Visions,” the page’s description reads.

Night Visions was first released September 4, 2012, and made stars out of Dan Reynolds and company with the singles “Radioactive,” “Demons” and “It’s Time.” The album has been certified seven-times Platinum by the RIAA, while “Radioactive” and “Demons” have both been certified Diamond.

Imagine Dragons released their latest album, Mercury — Act 2, earlier this month. They’ll launch a U.S. tour in support of the record August 5 in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

David Lee Roth debuts new solo song that pays tribute to Van Halen

David Lee Roth debuts new solo song that pays tribute to Van Halen
David Lee Roth debuts new solo song that pays tribute to Van Halen
Theo Wargo/Getty Images for MTV/ViacomCBS

David Lee Roth has posted a previously unreleased solo song at his official website and YouTube channel called “Nothing Could Have Stopped Us Back Then Anyway” that finds the Van Halen frontman reminiscing about his old band.

Accompanying the track is a vintage photo of Roth and his three Van Halen band mates all jumping in the air at the same time. The stripped-down tune features multi-tracked acoustic guitars and sparse keyboards accompanying Roth’s vocals.

The song begins with the lines, “We laughed, we cried, we threw that television off the balcony/ That memory means so much to me,” and Diamond Dave sings later, “Remember when you safety pinned the tablecloth to my pants/ And I stood up to the sound of dancing, and the sound of our romance beginning.”

According to the fan site Van Halen News Desk, Roth recorded “Nothing Could Have Stopped Us Back Then Anyway” several years ago with current Rob Zombie guitarist John 5 during the same sessions that yielded some of the other tracks Dave has released over the past couple years, including “Somewhere over the Rainbow Bar and Grill,” “Giddy-Up!,” “Low-Rez Sunset” and “Pointing at the Moon.”

In a 2021 interview with AL.com, John 5 mentioned “Nothing Could Have Stopped Us Back Then Anyway” while discussing his sessions with Roth.

“Being a Van Halen fan and a Dave Lee Roth fan, it’s unbelievable because it’s about Dave singing about Van Halen and what it was like,” the guitarist noted. “Really something special, so I really hope that comes out.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

“The Resort” is a serious mystery that’s also a lot of fun

“The Resort” is a serious mystery that’s also a lot of fun
“The Resort” is a serious mystery that’s also a lot of fun
David Yeh/Peacock

It’s time to check in to The Resort!

Peacock’s new mystery series The Resort starts streaming today, starring William Jackson Harper and Cristin Milioti as a couple celebrating their anniversary at a fancy Yucatan Peninsula resort, but instead of hitting the beach with mai tais, they’re investigating a possible murder. It’s serious, but there’s also some comedy, and Milioti tells ABC Audio she and Harper were given a lot of freedom to explore this couple who has hit a stale point in their 10-year marriage.

“We would try takes and complete silence. We would throw all the lines away. We would get in a mini fight. We would…almost get to the fight and then back off,” she recalls. “And like it just was so much fun to explore that…that’s the type of stuff as an actor where it’s like the dream.”

The show is from Palm Springs writer Andy Siara, which also starred Milioti, and she says they don’t leave you in too much suspense. Answers will be coming, “but they’re not going to be the answers that you think. Better tune in!”

“I think Andy has written something that is, like, very unexpected,” she continues. “And even the answers that you get…you just don’t see them coming, but they make sense and I find them to be very satisfying. But it’s like what you would least expect.”

Harper says he also loves a good mystery, but it has to be really good.

“Like a really good mystery I’m just like, yo, I need to go see what’s going on,” he explains. “But then like other, you know, other stuff, it’s just like, okay, well, either we’re going to have a twist or I called it. And so, you know, I kind of I do enjoy it.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Scoreboard roundup — 7/27/22

Scoreboard roundup — 7/27/22
Scoreboard roundup — 7/27/22
iStock

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Wednesday’s sports events:

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

INTERLEAGUE
Detroit 4, San Diego 3
Milwaukee 10, Minnesota 4
Colorado 6, Chi White Sox 5
St. Louis 6, Toronto 1
NY Mets 3, NY Yankees 2

AMERICAN LEAGUE
LA Angels 4, Kansas City 0
Oakland 4, Houston 2
Seattle 4, Texas 2
Cleveland 7, Boston 6
Tampa Bay 6, Baltimore 4

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Philadelphia 7, Atlanta 2
LA Dodgers 7, Washington 1
Arizona 5, San Francisco 3
Cincinnati 5, Miami 3

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.