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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Pronatalism and fertility issues
- Variability of biological pregnancy
- Termination of pregnancy (1)
- Termination of pregnancy (2)
- Third party reproduction
- Ethical issues with gamete donation
- In Vitro Fertilization (IVF)
- Ethical issues in IVF
- Types of surrogacy
- Ethical issues with surrogacy
- Uterine transplantation (UTx)
- Ethical issues for UTx
- Ectogenesis
- Ethical issues in ectogenesis
- Synthetic embryo models
- Thank you!
Topics Covered
- Pronatalism
- Termination of pregnancy
- In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF)
- Surrogacy
- Uterine Transplantation (UTx)
- Ectogenesis
- Synthetic embryo models
Links
Series:
Categories:
Therapeutic Areas:
Talk Citation
Kendal, E. (2024, November 28). Ethical challenges in reproduction [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 4, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/EESL6861.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Dr. Evie Kendal has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
Other Talks in the Series: The Female Reproductive System: from Basic Science to Fertility Treatments
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
I'm Dr. Evie Kendal
from Swinburne University
of Technology,
here to talk about ethical
challenges in reproduction.
0:11
The first thing to consider
when we're thinking about
ethical challenges
in reproduction
is the effect of
pronatalism on society.
Pronatalism refers
to the attitude
that people should
have children,
even if it's quite difficult
for them to achieve this goal.
Pronatalist societies promote
childbearing as normal,
so people who choose
not to have children
have to come up with
an explanation,
as opposed to this just
being a respected choice
in the same way as
having children.
Now, this can be
very problematic
for people who struggle
with fertility,
so infertility will
often carry a stigma
in a pronatalist society,
particularly for women.
Another effect of pronatalism
is that it often favors
biological reproduction
over alternatives like
foster care and adoption.
By that I mean it is
often assumed that
when someone adopts,
they've already tried to
have biological children
and perhaps couldn't.
Now, the other element
that comes into play here
is the fertility market.
This is a massive
commercial market.
There is a lot of
money being traded,
and what we're concerned
about ethically
is whether or not people
are making autonomous,
free choices to engage
with this industry,
or whether, perhaps, their
hopes for having children
are being exploited
for financial gain.
1:30
Another thing to note is that
biological pregnancy is
quite variable in humans.
The length can be different,
and the delivery method
can be different.
Some people deliver vaginally,
so through the birth canal,
and others deliver via
caesarean section,
so a surgical intervention
to remove the baby.
We also have
instrument-assisted deliveries,
such as forceps births.
In terms of the fetus,
we could have a typically
developing fetus,
or we might have a fetus who
has some atypical development.
That might be a genetic
condition or a disability.
There are also different
types of pregnancies
when it comes to the
emotional connection
to a pregnancy.
Some people have
wanted pregnancies,
so they are happy to be pregnant
and they want the baby.
An unwanted pregnancy
might be someone
who did not intend
to get pregnant.
That does not necessarily mean
they don't want the child at
the end of the pregnancy,
just that perhaps
the pregnancy itself
was unwanted or unplanned.
We also have what
is most typical,
which is a conditionally
wanted pregnancy.
Now, this means that the
person wanted to be pregnant,
perhaps they wanted
to start a family,
but their desire for the
pregnancy also has some caveats.
For example, most
people are looking for
a typical healthy pregnancy,
or perhaps a fetus that's
developing typically,
so what this can mean is
something can go from
a wanted pregnancy to
an unwanted pregnancy
if there is some challenge in
the development of the fetus.
We also very often see
something that starts
as an unwanted pregnancy
actually becoming a
wanted pregnancy.
What's most important here
is remembering that
pregnancy is what it is
to the person experiencing it,
and it can oscillate between
these different states.