Responding to Requests for Assisted Reproductive Technology Intervention Involving Women Who Cannot Give Consent.

Jennider S Bard, Lindsay Penrose
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Abstract

One of the plots of the Canadian science fiction thriller Orphan Black involves a scheme to create dozens of siblings by harvesting the eggs of one woman, fertilizing them with the sperm of a single man, and implanting them for gestation in dozens of apparently willing surrogates.¹ The casualness of the procedure speaks to how comfortable we have all become with reproduction by technology. Yet there are still aspects of this process that remain outside the normative boundaries of most of our worldviews. This article considers recent advances in assisted reproductive technology (ART) that can result in a viable, fertilized embryo even when the mother is herself either permanently unconscious from a severe injury or has actually lost all brain function and therefore meets the legal criteria for brain death. It reviews these advances and applies them to four scenarios, or vignettes, that represent different concerns about the prospective mother’s intent to reproduce before losing her ability to give consent.

对涉及无法给予同意的妇女的辅助生殖技术干预请求的回应。
加拿大科幻惊悚片《黑色孤儿》(Orphan Black)中有一个情节是这样的:从一个女人身上采集卵子,用一个男人的精子使其受精,然后将它们植入数十个明显愿意怀孕的代孕母亲体内,从而创造出数十个兄弟姐妹。这一过程的随意性表明,我们对科技带来的生育已经习以为常。然而,这个过程中仍有一些方面超出了我们大多数世界观的规范界限。这篇文章考虑了辅助生殖技术(ART)的最新进展,即使母亲本身因严重受伤而永久失去知觉或实际上已经失去所有脑功能(因此符合脑死亡的法律标准),也可以产生一个有活力的受精胚胎。它回顾了这些进步,并将其应用于四个场景,或小插曲,代表了对准妈妈在失去同意能力之前生育意图的不同担忧。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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