Recommended Practice based on International Guidelines
The notification and registration of the birth should be as complete as possible including in States which permit surrogacy arrangements or [States of destination] which subsequently register the child in their national registries. Identifying information should include date and place of birth, the surrogate mother, intending parent(s) and information relating to persons providing human reproductive material if any. Medical clinics, providers and/or registries of human reproductive material should make all identifying information available to national registries.
There are two general processes for surrogacy. 1) the original birth registration record has the names of the intended parents (no amendment required). 2) the birth is registered under the name of the surrogate (gestational) mother, and then the birth registration record is amended, based on a court surrogacy decree, to have the names of the intended parents included.
Ghana
Legal Analysis
Record-keeping in cases of surrogacy is based on High Court orders. The parties to the arrangement may obtain a pre-birth parental order within twelve weeks after introducing an embryo or gamete into the surrogate mother. This order may provide for the naming of one or both parents of the child to be born via surrogacy or any other assisted reproductive birth, provided that the birth occurs within twenty-eight weeks of the date of the High Court order. A copy of a pre-birth parental order must be issued to the District Registrar of the district in which the child will be born, the intended parent, the surrogate mother, and the hospital where the child is born if the birth occurs at a hospital facility. The woman who gives birth to the child may register the child in accordance with the information in the pre-birth parental order.
If no pre-birth parental order has been issued, the woman who gives birth to the child will be registered as the child’s mother and must provide the other information necessary for registration. Where a child is already born, an intended parent or surrogate mother may apply to the High Court between 28 days and 6 months after the birth of the child for a post-birth parental order or substitute parentage order. A post-birth parental order or substitute parentage order may name the intended parent or surrogate mother as the legal parent of the child and must be immediately served on the relevant District Registrar, who must then strike out the original birth record and create a new birth record in accordance with the order. The birth record that is struck out must be kept confidential, but may be made accessible to the child in question after that child reaches age 21.