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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- The global trade in human tissue ('body shopping')
- A complex market
- Outside inside, inside outside
- Global trade not confined to private sector
- Body shopping' catches bioethics unawares
- Injustice and global tissue trade
- Just over the channel…
- Effects of Brexit
- Further implications
- What are more general issues?
- Can't regulate, won't regulate?
- Regulation in global context
- The body as property
- Property as a bundle of rights
- Applying bundle concept to medical research
- Why do patients need protection?
- The case of John Moore
- What makes you think you own your body?
- The Greenberg case
- Donors or dupes?
- The (unsatisfactory) outcome
- Control, not profit
- Genetic patents
- European Patent Convention (unaffected by Brexit)
- Should we be allowed to sell our tissues and organs?
- Giving or selling eggs
- How should egg providers for research be considered?
- So which are they?
- Could Fair Trade apply?
- Exploitation and fairness
- Exploitation and choice
- Waste, tissue and labour
- Surplus value and altruism
- Exploitation and poverty
- Two alternatives for the future
- Unrealistic?
- Some practical altruistic models
- Thank you
Topics Covered
- The global trade in human tissue
- Regulation of human tissue trade
- The impact of Brexit
- The body as property
- Case studies
- Giving or selling our tissue and organs
- Two alternatives for the future
Talk Citation
Dickenson, D. (2022, February 27). Human tissue and global ethics [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/TZUV6614.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Donna Dickenson has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
Other Talks in the Series: Tissue in Research
Transcript
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0:00
Welcome to this talk on Human
Tissue and Global Ethics.
I'm Professor Donna Dickenson and I'm an Emeritus
Professor of Medical Ethics at the University of London.
0:13
The global trade in human tissue is
sometimes referred to as 'body shopping'.
That's the title of a book
that I wrote on the subject.
Many people will have heard about it, in particular respect
to one phenomenon, sometimes called 'reproductive tourism'.
This is the trade-in of human eggs and
sperm, often sold by private banks.
An example, which really is reproductive tourism in both senses, is
this advertisement from a US college newspaper, which is headed,
"Girls: Sell your eggs and enjoy
the nightlife of Chennai!"
Another example is this
statement on the web is from
the founder of a commercial egg and
sperm bank called Beautiful People.
The quotation is, "Everyone, including ugly people, would like to bring good-looking
children into the world, and we can't be selfish with our attractive gene pool."
1:07
More seriously, the trade in human tissue, and
particularly the market in human eggs is a complex market,
and it's differentiated by so-called 'desirable'
phenotypes such as musicality, intelligence, height,
athletic ability, and even hair and skin color, and
these can all affect the pricing of human eggs.
In those jurisdictions that permit egg sale, and not all do, even in
the United States, many jurisdictions do not permit it in many states.
But where it is permitted,
the Ethics Committee of
the American College of Reproductive
Medicine sets out guidelines.
In the 2021 guidelines,
they view payment for eggs used in research or reproduction as
ethically justifiable, if not so high as to be an inducement to sell.
This is a broader phenomenon than merely the sale
of human eggs and sperm, as important as that is.