René Frydman, born in 1943 in Soumoulou (Pyrénées-Atlantiques), is a French obstetrician, known for enabling the birth of the first French test tube baby.In 1970, René Frydman went to provide medical assistance to Palestinians in Jordan during Black September. The following year, he was among ...
René Frydman, born in 1943 in Soumoulou (Pyrénées-Atlantiques), is a French obstetrician, known for enabling the birth of the first French test tube baby.
In 1970, René Frydman went to provide medical assistance to Palestinians in Jordan during Black September. The following year, he was among the founding members of Doctors Without Borders, alongside Bernard Kouchner. In 1973, engaged in the Health Information Group, he signed the Manifesto of the 331 doctors admitting to having performed an abortion.
In 1974, he joined the Antoine-Béclère Hospital in Clamart, where he would remain and become head of the gynecology, obstetrics, and reproductive medicine department in 1990, a position he held for twenty years. He obtained his medical aggregation in 1979.
René Frydman was instrumental in the development of Assisted Reproductive Technology in France. He was part of the team (led by Professor Émile Papiernik) that enabled the birth of the first French test tube baby, Amandine, on February 24, 1982. Amandine was conceived using in vitro fertilization, developed in France by biologist Jacques Testart and his collaborators. In 1986, René Frydman delivered the first baby born from a frozen embryo. In 2000, he achieved the first birth after preimplantation diagnosis, and in 2003, the birth of the first French baby resulting from in vitro maturation. From 2006 to 2011, he was Head of the Woman Couple Embryo Child Pole. In February 2011, he created the first ‘medicinal’ baby in France, or ‘double hope’ baby in his own words.
In addition to his medical roles, René Frydman has been a member of the National Human Rights Committee (1987-1988), a member of the National Consultative Ethics Committee (1986-1990), a Bioethics Mission Officer under Minister of Health Bernard Kouchner (1992), a Perinatality Plan Mission Officer under the Secretary of State for Health (1997-1998), a technical advisor to the Minister of Research (2001-2002), a member of the National Birth Commission (2005-2007), a member of the Scientific Council of the Île-de-France Region (2006-2010), and president of the High Medical Committee of the Île-de-France Region (2011).
In February 2012, he created the blog “A child… finally” on Le Monde.fr, where he advocates for the establishment of the “Foundation for the Prevention and Fight Against Sterility,” aimed at promoting research and innovation in this field.
Awards:
– Officer of the Legion of Honor (2002)
– Jean Bernard Prize for Scientific Communication (Medical Research Foundation) June 2003.
– Medicine and Culture Prize – Paris 28/01/2004
– Claude Bernard Prize from the City of Paris (2006)
– Jacques Salat-Baroux Prize from the Academy of Medicine (2008)
– Bernheim Prize for Sciences from the Foundation of French Judaism (2012).
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