Beginning of life Flashcards

1
Q

When thinking about who should be parents, what ethical arguments arise?

A

Rights and responsibilities of reproduction

The fertility paradox: regulation, access and equity (those who find it more difficult to conceive and get support go through more scrutiny where as those who conceive on their own are free to do so)

Autonomy versus non-maleficence to future child

Societal interference, social justice, social engineering

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2
Q

Assisted reproduction techniques (7)

A

Artificial insemination – using donor or partner sperm

In vitro fertilisation (IVF) – fertilise gametes outside the body then inserting it again

Gamete donation – select a sperm and inject it into the egg

Embryo donation

Surrogacy

Use of artificial gametes

Reproductive cloning

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3
Q

What opportunities has assisted reproduction given people?

A

A treatment for infertility

Single and same sex parents

Prevention of inherited conditions

Fertility preservation

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4
Q

What concerns are there about the possible uses of assisted reproduction?

A

Sex selection - family balancing - choosing gender of next child

Designer babies

The reproduction industry

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5
Q

Relative infertility

A

Maybe a couple’s chances of conceiving are poorer than those around them

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6
Q

Ethical questions the NHS has to answer regarding treatments?

A

Who should be offered treatment?

What treatment should be offered?

How should this be funded?

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7
Q

What is pre-implantation genetic diagnosis?

A

Process of screening out embryos that carry life threatening conditions before they are implanted

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8
Q

What is a saviour sibling?

A

When parents have a child by selective IVF as a potential source of donor organs or cells for an existing brother or sister with a life-threatening medical condition.

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9
Q

Arguments against sex selection

A

Undermines the status of women - many countries select male embryos as they value male offspring more highly

Gender ratio imbalance

Against nature - playing God?

Slippery slope

Parental love - goes against unconditional parental love

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10
Q

Why might a woman freeze her eggs?

A

Women that are about to undergo chemo can freeze their eggs to preserve them

Chemo treatment can reduce the number of eggs stored in your ovaries and can mean fewer or no eggs are released. Or sometimes, it can make you infertile

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11
Q

What are some ethical questions relating to Social egg freezing?

A

Is it a medical need? Or just convenient?

Impact of age of fertility in women – age related reduction in ovarian reserve

Technology is available

More reproductive control for women – choose to have children at a time that is convenient for them

Financial implications - IVF only free 3 times on NHS. Also may want to save eggs for a time where you are financially stable

Pregnancies beyond menopausal age - women are living longer but are mothers getting too old? If they die and leave young children behind is this ethical?

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12
Q

What is ‘reproductive tourism’?

A

When patients travel to other states or countries seeking fertility treatments in various forms because those treatments aren’t available to them in their own state or country

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13
Q

Commercial Surrogacy exploitation

A

Women act as surrogates for paying customers. Exploitation of poor or vulnerable women.

Often the women are living in strict environments in order to ensure the pregnancy is successful and optimise the outcome for commissioning parents

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14
Q

Why do some people argue that life starts when the primitive streak develops?

A

Because this is when the CNS starts to develop and they believe this is central to life

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15
Q

What are reasons for Abortion? (5)

A

Acknowledges sexual and reproductive rights of women

Unwanted pregnancy can harm physical & mental heath

Safe abortion saves lives globally

A potential human is not a child/human

Wanted children thrive

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16
Q

Reasons against Abortion (3)

A

Denial of the rights of the embryo/fetus – can’t speak for themselves

Eliminating the potential for life

Contraception as an alternative

17
Q

What is the triple test screening / foetal anomalies screening done for and when?

A

To look for chromosomal anomalies - during 2nd trimester

These tests then lead onto diagnostic tests like Chorionic villi sample + amniocentesis

18
Q

What does the triple test screening test for?

A

Serum levels of:

  • Alpha fetoprotein
  • Estradiol
  • hCG (human chorionic gonadotropin)
19
Q

Ethical questions relating to pre-natal screening

A

Justification

Whose decision is it?

Which conditions should be screened for?

Linked to the decision to terminate pregnancy?

20
Q

At what age can a baby survive outside the uterus?

A

24 weeks

There is a serious risk of disability though

21
Q

Extreme prematurity puts clinicians in difficult position in regards to what right of the baby?

A

Right to be resuscitated

22
Q

Ethical issues at the beginning of life

A

Pregnancy involves two/three individuals – one without a voice

Autonomy- whose? The patient, their partner or the unborn child?

Beneficence – for whom?

Non-maleficence – what is harmful?

Utilitarianism: Individual versus collective good

Can the end justify the means?