Reliable DNA testing & paternity testing services by easyDNA Canada.
 
Home
Contact Us
Have us call you
Order Here / Price List
View below the complete list of services we offer.
Paternity Testing
Legal DNA Test
Relationship Testing
DNA Profiles
Infidelity DNA Test
Discreet DNA Samples
Ancestry DNA Testing
Immigration DNA Testing
Express DNA Testing
Genetic Predisposition Test
Menu listing all you need to know about our services.
Payment Options
ISO Accreditation & Accuracy
Sample Collection Guide
DNA Testing Tips
Sample DNA Test Results
Understand Your Result
Our Laboratory
Frequent Questions
DNA Testing Knowledgebase
Blog
Chat live to Customer Services Canada about our DNA tests and more.
easyDNA offers its DNA testing services around the world. Simply select your country.

easyDNA RSS feed
Article and news about DNA testing and paternity testing.

Useful Information About DNA Maternity Tests

A DNA maternity test may be required for many different reasons. Cases vary from those searching for birth parents, to those needing proof of a biological relationship for immigration purposes. Working in the exact same way as a DNA paternity test, a maternity test will compare DNA markers of a child and an alleged mother.

In adoption cases, a child may grow up wanting to know the identity of their “real” or birth parents. Some adopted children suffer with identity issues and feel that meeting a birth parent will help solve this. Others may just be curious or need information on a family tree. Whatever the circumstances, once they believe they have located a parent, a DNA maternity test is the only certain way knowing they have found their biological mother.


In donor conception, where a child is born to parents with fertility problems, it can also be necessary to locate a birth parent. As with adopted children, the reason may be to satisfy their curiosity, or for medical reasons such as organ donation. In these instances a match must be made between the recipient and the donor, and more often than not, these are best between biological relations.


Immigration departments are also using DNA maternity tests as part of the application process concerning visas and citizenship. The Canadian Immigration Department endorses DNA testing as one means of providing evidence of a claimed, biological, family relationship. Usually, other forms of evidence will suffice, such as birth certificates or family books; however, DNA testing is a useful option when other evidence is unreliable or unavailable.  


What Does The Test Involve?


The test would require the sample of the mother and the child to be sent to the laboratory. The sample of the father is not required to confirm the maternity. The lab would then begin by looking at the 16 different DNA markers in the DNA of each person participating in the test. We all have a pair of each of these markers, one being inherited from the biological mother and one being inherited from the biological father. The test would then make comparisons of these markers between the mother and the child. A child’s markers are made up of 50% from its mother and 50% from its father. 


The test would be performed in the exact same way as a paternity test – just swapping the mother for the father in the test. A laboratory will not report a result unless there is at least a 99% probability that the possible mother is or isn’t the biological mother of the child. 


At easyDNA you will find answers to all questions regarding paternity, siblingship and legal definition. We are equipped to provide full legal and emotional DNA Paternity Test services, using state of the art technology, at competitive rates, on time, every time. We operate through a network of offices covering a wide geographic area. We currently operate in 12 offices around the world. To contact us with further questions please email info@easydna.net.

 
PREVIOUS NEXT