Beginning of Life COPY Flashcards

1
Q

what are some key questioons that should be thought about in regards to the start of life?

A
  • Who should be parents?
  • What is the remit of assisted reproduction?
  • Should we choose our children?
  • What is the status of the embryo and fetus?
  • How important is maternal autonomy?
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2
Q

what is important information to think about in regards to who should be parents?

A

rights and responsibilities of reproduction

the fertility paradox: regulation, access and equity

autonomy versus non-maleficence

societal interference, social justice, social engineering

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3
Q

what should be thought about in regards to the welfare of the potential child

A

percieved predicted wellbeing

spontaneous vs assisted conception

criteria for fostering and adoption

indeal vs real families

is it someitmes better not to be born?

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4
Q

whata re some techniques for assisted reproduction?

A
  • Artificial insemination
  • In vitro fertilisation (IVF)
  • Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI)
  • Preimplantation sperm injection
  • Gamete donation
  • Embryo donation
  • Use of artificial gametes
  • Reproductive cloning
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5
Q

what are some oppotunities (good and bad) in which assisted reproduction may be used?

A

Good:

  • Treatment of infertility
  • Single and same sex parents
  • Prevention of inherited conditions
  • Fertility preservation

Bad:

  • Sex selection
  • “Designer babies”
  • The reproduction industry
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6
Q

what should be thought about in regards to the treatment of infertility?

A
  • What is infertility?
  • Who are infertile - people vs couples
  • Absolute versus relative impediment to conception
  • Who should be offered treatment?
  • What treatment should be offered?
  • How should this be funded?
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7
Q

Choosing your children:
Disability free versus designer babies?

What are ways and reasons that this can be done?

A
  • Pre-implantation genetic diagnosis
  • Pre-implantation genetic testing for anomalies
  • Screening for delayed onset conditions
  • Sex selection for family balancing
  • Seeking disability (deafness and achondroplasia)
  • Saviour siblings
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8
Q

what are the arugments relating to sex selection?

A
  • Undermining the status of women
  • Gender ratio imbalance
  • Against nature
  • Slippery slope
  • Parental love
  • Virtue of acceptance
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9
Q

what are the impacts of social egg freezing?

A
  • Impact of age of fertility in women
  • Technology available
  • More reproductive control
  • Financial implications
  • Preventive medicine or reproductive sloth
  • Pregnancies beyond menopausal age
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10
Q

The reproduction industry:

  • Donor _______
  • ________ mothers
  • New opportunities for _________
  • Problems with ______
  • Potential for ________
A

gametes

Surrogate

parenthood

access

exploitation

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11
Q

What are the effects of the reproduction industry?

A

commercialisation of reproduction

reproductive tourism

need to source donor gamates

global market in surrogate mothers

provides new opportunities for parenthood

there is potential for exploitation

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12
Q

when thinking about the moral status of an embryo, what is a common question that is raised?

A

When does life begin?

  • Moment of life and the primitive streak
  • Pain and neurological development
  • Embryonic stem cells
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13
Q

Abortion:

____________ sexual and reproductive rights of women

A

Acknowledges

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14
Q

Abortion:

what can unwanted pregnancy do to someone?

A

Unwanted pregnancy can harm physical & mental heath

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15
Q

Abortion:

does safe abortion save lives?

A

Safe abortion saves lives globally

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16
Q

Abortion:

A potential human is ___ a child

A

not

17
Q

Abortion:

do wanted children do better?

A

Wanted children thrive

18
Q

Abortion:

• ______ of the rights of the embryo/fetus

A

Denial

19
Q

Abortion:

__________ the potential for life

A

Eliminating

20
Q

Abortion:

what can be used as an alternative?

A

contraception

21
Q

what are the different ways of pre-natal screening?

A
  • Triple test (AFP, Estrio, beta hCG) for Chromosomal anomalies
  • Non-invasive prenatal screening (NIPT)
  • Screening vs diagnostic test
22
Q

what questions should be thought about in regards to pre-natal screening

A
  • Which conditions should be tested for?
  • Whose decision should it be?
  • Linked to decision to terminate pregnancy?
23
Q

Maternal versus fetal interests:

A
  • Fetal therapy/surgery involving maternal risk
  • Delivery for fetal or maternal interest
  • Maternal autonomy and status of fetus
  • Competence for informed consent
24
Q

in regards to neonatal care (care a baby born premature) what needs to be though about?

A
  • The right to be resuscitated
  • Criteria for resuscitation
  • Living a disability free life: who decides
25
Q

Neonatal care:

  • Prematurity is a major _________ of pregnancy
  • __ weeks: age of viability but serious risk of disability
  • Extreme prematurity and the right to be __________
  • Resuscitation: who decides?
A

complication

24

resuscitated

Every week that goes one, increased chance of survival

23 weeks is a difficult area

Chance of surface survival is very little but decisions need to be individualised

26
Q

what are ethical issues to consider at the start of life?

A
  • Involves two/three individuals - one without a voice
  • Autonomy - for whom?
  • Beneficence - for whom?
  • Non-maleficence - what is harmful? Harmful for whom?
  • Utilitarianism: Individual versus collective good
  • Can the end justify the means?
27
Q

what are 2 different types of cloning?

A

reproductive cloning

therapeutic cloning