{"id":53903,"date":"2024-04-26T23:36:05","date_gmt":"2024-04-26T23:36:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/branding\/my-sisters-keeper\/"},"modified":"2024-04-26T23:36:05","modified_gmt":"2024-04-26T23:36:05","slug":"my-sisters-keeper","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sheilathewriter.com\/blog\/my-sisters-keeper\/","title":{"rendered":"My Sisters Keeper"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>My Sister\u2019s Keeper<\/p>\n<p>Have you heard of \u201cdesigner babies\u201d? \u00a0Or perhaps you saw or read\u00a0My Sister\u2019s Keeper, a story about a young girl who was conceived through In Vitro Fertilization to be a genetically matched donor for her older sister with leukemia? The concept of selecting traits for one\u2019s child comes from a technology called preimplantation genetic diagnosis\u00a0(PGD), a technique used on embryos acquired during In Vitro Fertilization to screen for genetic diseases. \u00a0PGD tests embryos for genetic abnormalities, and based on the information gleaned, provides potential parents with the opportunity to select to implant only the \u201chealthy\u201d, non-genetically diseased embryos into the mother. \u00a0But this genetic testing of the embryo also opens the door for other uses as well, including selecting whether you have a male or female child, or even the possibility of selecting specific features for the child, like eye color. \u00a0Thus, many ethicists wonder about the future of the technology, and whether it will lead to babies that are \u201cdesigned\u201d by their parents.<\/p>\n<p>Today\u2019s post is an exploration of the ethical issues raised by prenatal and preimplantation genetic diagnosis, written by Santa Clara Professor Dr. Lawrence Nelson, who has been writing about and teaching bioethics for over 30 years. \u00a0Read on to examine the many ethical issues raised by this technology.<\/p>\n<p>Prenatal and Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis<\/p>\n<p>Background:<\/p>\n<p>The overwhelming majority of people on earth, due to a wide range of reasons, beliefs, bodily motives, and attitudes\u2013some good, some bad, and some in the moral neutral zone\u2013reproduce.\u00a0 They are the genetic, gestational, and\/or social (rearing) parents of a child.\u00a0 Birth rates in some countries are at a historic low (Japan\u2018s is beneath replacement with the consequent deep graying of an entire society).\u00a0 In others, mostly in the developing part of the world where infant and maternal morbidity and mortality (not to mention poverty and disease) are quite high, birth rates remain similarly high.<\/p>\n<p>In the economically developed part of the world, the process of making and having babies has become increasingly medicalized, at least for those fortunate enough to have ready access to the ever more sophisticated tools and knowledge of obstetrical medicine.\u00a0 From the time prior to pregnancy (fertility treatments, in vitro fertilization) to birth (caesarean delivery, high tech neonatal intensive care) and in between (fetal surgery), medical science and technology can help many to reach the goal any good parent should want: the live birth of a healthy child to a healthy mother.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cMedical and biological sciences can together determine whether a fetus will (or might) have over a thousand different genetic diseases or abnormalities\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Parallel to obstetrical medicine, science and technology have progressed immensely in another are over the last 30 or so years.\u00a0 The Human Genome Project (and the related research it has stimulated) has generated an amazing amount of knowledge about the nature and identity of normal\u2013and abnormal\u2013human genetic codes.\u00a0 Now the medical and biological sciences can together determine whether a fetus will (or might) have over a thousand different genetic diseases or abnormalities.\u00a0 Ultrasound examination can look into the womb (quite literally) and see developmental abnormalities in the fetus (such as neural tube defects like spina bifida and anencephaly).\u00a0 Even a simple blood test done on a pregnant woman can determine whether the fetus she is carrying has trisomy 21 (down syndrome), a genetic condition associated with mental retardation and, not infrequently, cardiac and other health problems.<\/p>\n<p>Pregnant women who have health insurance that covers obstetrical care (and many millions of American women do\u00a0not), particularly if they are older (&gt;35 years), are more or less routinely offered prenatal genetic diagnosis by their obstetricians.\u00a0\u00a0Chorionic villus samplingis a medical procedure that takes a few fetal cells from the placenta and can be done around 10 weeks after the woman\u2019s last menstrual period.\u00a0 These cells can then be analyzed to determine the presence of genetic abnormalities.\u00a0\u00a0Amniocentesis\u00a0is a medical procedure that obtains fetal cells from the amniotic fluid and is usually done later in pregnancy, typically after 14 weeks following the woman\u2019s last menstrual period.\u00a0 When done by experienced medical professionals, both procedures carry about a 0.5% risk of spontaneous abortion.\u00a0 The genetic analysis done on these fetal cells can determine the presence of fatal genetic diseases (such as Tay-Sachs, trisomy 13 and 18), disease that can cause the born child much suffering (children with Lesch-Nyan, for example, compulsively engage in self-destructive behavior like lip chewing, while children with spinal muscular atrophy have severe, progressive muscle-wasting), and conditions that typically cause mental retardation (such as Fragile-X and Emanuel syndrome).<\/p>\n<p>Although tremendous strides have been made in genetic science\u2019s ability to detect chromosomal abnormalities, precious little success has been achieved in treating genetic disorders directly either prenatally or postnatally.\u00a0 Some symptomatic treatment may well be available, but almost nothing that will actually cure or significantly ameliorate the effects of the disease.\u00a0 A pregnant woman who wishes to avoid the birth of a child with genetic disease has little alternative but to seek termination of the pregnancy.<\/p>\n<p>The science and technology of assisted reproduction (in this case in vitro fertilization [IVF]) meets the science and technology of obstetrical medicine in preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD).\u00a0 Embryos are created in vitro by mixing oocytes taken from the woman who intends to gestate one (or more) of them from a donor, and sperm taken from her partner or a donor.\u00a0 Genetic analysis is performed on one or few cells from each embryo, the loss of which does not affect the embryo\u2019s ability to develop normally once implanted in a womb.\u00a0 Only those embryos free of detectable genetic abnormalities are then implanted in the woman\u2019s womb in the hope that they will then attach to the uterine wall and develop normally.\u00a0 While success rates for implantation vary, many women have given birth following PGD.\u00a0 The main advantage of PGD over chorionic villus sampling and amniocentesis for many women and couples is that it avoid the need for a surgical abortion to end an undesired pregnancy, although it does result in discarding the affected embryos.<\/p>\n<p>Should people be able to select the sex of their baby?<\/p>\n<p>5.\u00a0 Both PrGD and PGD identify the sex of the embryo or fetus.\u00a0 This raises\u00a0the question of whether it is ethically permissible for an embryo to be discarded or a fetus to be aborted because of sex.\u00a0 The selection of an embryo\u2019s sex via PGD is done for two basic reasons: (1) preventing the transmission of sex-linked genetic disorders; and (2) choosing sex to achieve gender balance in a family with more than one child, to achieve a preferred order in the birth of children by sex, or to provide a parent with a child of the sex he or she prefers to raise. [2]\u00a0 While little extended ethical debate exists regarding the former, sex selection for the purpose of preventing the transmission of sex-linked genetic disease, the latter is the subject of heated ethical disagreement.<\/p>\n<p>The ethical objections to sex selection for nonmedical reasons can be grounded both in the very act of deliberately choosing one sex over the other and the untoward consequences of sex selection, particularly if it is performed frequently.\u00a0 Sex selection can be considered inherently ethically objectionable because it makes sex a determinative reason to value one human being over another when it ought to be completely irrelevant: females and males as such always ought be valued equally and never differentially.\u00a0 Sex selection can also be ethically criticized for the undesirable consequences it may generate.\u00a0 Choice by sex supports socially created assumptions about the relative value and meaning of \u201cmale\u201d and \u201cfemale,\u201d with the latter almost universally being considered seriously inferior to the former.\u00a0 By supporting assumptions that hold femaleness in lower social regard, sex selection enhances the likelihood that females will be the targets of infanticide, unfair discrimination, and damaging stereotypes.<\/p>\n<p>Proponents of the ethical acceptability of sex selection would argue that a parent\u2019s desire for family balancing can be\u2013and typically is\u2013morally neutral.\u00a0 The defense of family balancing rests on the view that once a parent has a child of one sex, he or she can properly prefer to have a child of the other sex because the two genders are different and generate different parenting experiences.<\/p>\n<p>To insist [that the experience of parenting a boy is different from that of parenting a girl] is not the case seems breathtakingly simplistic, as if gender played no role either in a person\u2019s personality or relationships to others.\u00a0 Gender may be partly cultural (which does not make it less \u201creal\u201d), but it probably is partly biological\u2026.\u00a0 I see nothing wrong with wanting to have both experiences. [3]<\/p>\n<p>An opponent of sex selection for family balancing can argue that good parents\u2013whether prospective or actual\u2013ought never to prefer, favor, or give more love to a child of one sex over the other.\u00a0 For example, a morally good and admirable parent would never love a male child more than a female child, give the male more privileges than a female, or give a female more material things than a male simply because of sex or beliefs about the child\u2019s \u201cproper\u201dgender.\u00a0 A virtuous and conscientious parent, then, ought not to think that, or behave as if, a child of one sex is better than one of the other sex, nor should a good parent believe or act as if, at bottom, girls are really different than boys in the ways that truly matter.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cSex selection is at least strongly ethically suspect, if not outright wrong\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The argument in favor of sex selection for family balancing has to assume that gender and gender roles exist and matter in the lived world.\u00a0 For if they did not, then no reason would exist to differentiate the experience of parenting a male child from that of a female.\u00a0 However, it is precisely the reliance upon this assumption to which the opponent of sex selection objects: accepting\u2013and perpetuating\u2013gender roles inevitably both harms and wrongs both males and females, although females clearly suffer much more from them than males.\u00a0 While some gender roles or expectations are innocuous (e.g., men don\u2019t like asking for directions), the overwhelming majority (e.g., males are\u2013and should be\u2013aggressive, women are\u2013and should be\u2013self-sacrificing) are not.\u00a0 Consequently, given that sex selection is inevitably gendered and most gender roles and expectations restrict the freedom of persons to be who they wish to be regardless of gender, sex selection is at least strongly ethically suspect, if not outright wrong.<\/p>\n<p>[1]\u00a0 Steinbock B. Disability, prenatal testing, and selective abortion.\u00a0In Parens E, Asch A (eds): Prenatal Testing and Disability Rights 2000; Washington DC, Georgetown Univ. Press: 108-123.<\/p>\n<p>[2]\u00a0 Ethics Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine. Sex selection and preimplantation genetic diagnosis. Fertility and Sterility 1999; 72(4): 595-598.<\/p>\n<p>[3] Steinbock B. Sex selection: not obviously wrong. Hastings Center Report 2002; 32(1): 23-28.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>My Sister\u2019s Keeper Have you heard of \u201cdesigner babies\u201d? \u00a0Or perhaps you saw or read\u00a0My Sister\u2019s Keeper, a story about<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-53903","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v25.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>My Sisters Keeper - sheilathewriter<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/sheilathewriter.com\/blog\/my-sisters-keeper\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"My Sisters Keeper - sheilathewriter\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"My Sister\u2019s Keeper Have you heard of \u201cdesigner babies\u201d? 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