GENETICS, ETHICS, AND PHYSICIANS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 33
About This Presentation
Title:

GENETICS, ETHICS, AND PHYSICIANS

Description:

GENETICS, ETHICS, AND PHYSICIANS ... imagine a couple where the woman was exposed to a virus with potentially teratagenic effects for an early pregnancy. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:36
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 34
Provided by: msuEduco2
Learn more at: https://www.msu.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: GENETICS, ETHICS, AND PHYSICIANS


1
GENETICS, ETHICS, AND PHYSICIANS
  • Leonard M. Fleck, Ph.D.
  • Michigan State University

2
TWO PREMISES
  • We are beyond the age of genetic innocence
  • We have entered (and cannot exit) the age of
    genetic responsibility
  • Philip Kitcher, Lives to Come The Genetic
    Revolution and Human Possibilities

3
BACKGROUND
  • Genetic tests are different (in morally important
    ways) from non-genetic tests
  • Popular belief in genetic determinism our genome
    represents coded future diary
  • History of eugenics
  • Risks of genetic discrimination health care and
    employment
  • Links to reproductive decisions

4
LEVELS OF MORAL JUDGMENT
  • Personal
  • Professional
  • Social (public policy)

5
VALUES
  • Genetic Privacy
  • Procreative Liberty
  • Genetic Responsibility (personal)
  • Genetic Responsibility (social)
  • Best Interests of Future Possible Children
  • General Welfare of Society
  • Health Care Justice

6
VALUES
  • Obligations to do no Harm
  • Respect for Incipient Human Life
  • Respect for Persons with Disabilities
  • Non-Discrimination
  • Respect for Cultural and Religious Differences

7
DOMAINS OF MORAL ACTION
  • Domain of Moral Obligation things we either MUST
    do or MUST REFRAIN from doing (forbidden actions)
  • Domain of Moral Permissibility things we are
    free to do or refrain from doing without fear of
    moral criticism
  • Domain of Moral Ideals conduct worthy of the
    highest moral praise (saintly action)

8
CASE
  • A couple knows they are at risk for having a
    child with cystic fibrosis (or Fragile X Syndrome
  • They want to have a child of their own, but they
    do not wish to impose this risk on the child
  • They want your help in accessing a non-standard
    form of reproduction

9
QUESTIONS
  • Should this couple be morally commended for
    making a difficult, but genetically responsible
    decision? That is, are they to be commended for
    trying to avoid (at expense and burden to
    themselves) imposing unnecessary suffering on
    this future possible child?

10
QUESTIONS
  • Should this couple be morally criticized for
    making a decision that is invidiously
    discriminatory? That is, are they saying by
    their actions that they wish to reject a child
    with a serious genetic disability because they
    would prefer a more perfect child?

11
QUESTIONS
  • Should a good doctor acquiesce to the request of
    this couple for access to alternate reproductive
    options because their request is within the moral
    bounds of procreative/ genetic liberty?
  • If so, what sorts of choices would you see (as a
    physician) as beyond the bounds of procreative/
    genetic liberty?

12
QUESTIONS
  • Is the decision of the couple in this case really
    a matter of genetic privacy? That is, is their
    physician morally obligated (as a physician) to
    be absolutely neutral regarding their
    choice----do no more than advice them of
    reproductive options, then facilitate access?

13
QUESTIONS
  • If this couple wanted to access pre- implantation
    genetic diagnosis so that they could choose an
    eight-cell embryo that was free of a particular
    genetic defect, would you see this as a morally
    permissible option, given the number of embryos
    that will be discarded?

14
MY RESPONSE
  • Morally speaking, choosing PGD should be thought
    of as a matter of procreative liberty.
  • Parents are not violating the rights of anyone
    (from a secular perspective)
  • Parents intent is to act in the best interests of
    a future possible child
  • No obvious social harm in permitting parents to
    make such choices

15
MY RESPONSE
  • To understand the moral logic behind my claim,
    imagine a couple where the woman was exposed to a
    virus with potentially teratagenic effects for an
    early pregnancy. Her physician advises the couple
    to have only protected sex for 3 months (which
    they do,conceiving a child 5 months later. They
    chose an unaffected rather than an affected
    child, which is morally unobjectionable.

16
MY RESPONSE
  • NOTE There are major moral virtues for ALL
    attached to the permissibility of PGD
  • Couples who refuse PGD are not open to moral
    criticism, so long as they have been thoughtful
    and are prepared to accept the consequences
  • Society would be open to moral criticism if we
    reduced access to needed health care or related
    supportive services for affected children as a
    way of discouraging prospective parents from
    making bad genetic decisions.

17
Professional Ethics and PGD
  • I would argue that it would be morally wrong for
    a physician to fail to inform a couple concerned
    about the conception of a child with a serious
    genetic disorder of the option of PGD.
  • Note If this physician has personal moral
    objections to PGD, he has no obligation to make a
    referral. BUT he may not deny this couple the
    medical information they need to make an informed
    choice.

18
Social Policy and PGD
  • It is very difficult to imagine what would
    justify a restrictive or prohibitive policy with
    regard to PGD in a liberal pluralistic democratic
    tolerant society. No public interest is
    threatened by the option.
  • A socially harder question is whether a society
    could rightly encourage use of PGD through public
    educational efforts or through explicit social
    subsidies.

19
QUESTION
  • There are some couples who are both dwarves or
    both deaf. They seek to use PGD to choose an
    embryo that will be either deaf or a dwarf like
    themselves. Is such a use of this technology as
    morally permissible as using it to avoid having a
    child with Tay Sachs or Huntingtons or fragile X
    or cystic fibrosis etc.?

20
QUESTIONS
  • If the cost of a successful pregnancy via PGD is
    about 40,000, would you work with other
    physicians to see to it that such costs are
    covered either by private insurance or through a
    public financing mechanism? That is, do you see
    such funding as a matter of social justice?

21
Justice and PGD
  • Claim 1 A justice argument can be made for
    public funding for PGD for couples at risk of
    having children who would otherwise be have
    serious genetic disorders manifesting themselves
    from birth on.
  • Claim 2 No justice argument will support PGD
    for couples at risk of having children with
    mid-life to late life genetic disorders.

22
Justice and PGD
  • Claim 1 Justice arguments support PGD for
    early onset genetic disorders because of
  • Protecting fair equality of opportunity for these
    future possible children
  • Protecting net welfare of these children,
    preventing genetic harms that would reduce both
    length and quality of life
  • Efficiency reasons social costs of PGD are
    quickly paid for through reduced health care
    needs of these children

23
Justice and PGD
  • Claim 2 Justice does not require PGD for late
    in life genetic disorders because
  • The causal connections to effecting the disorder
    are too uncertain (except for HD)
  • Medicine may produce cheap genetic interventions
    over the next several decades to minimize
    actualization of these genetic risks
  • Efficiency arguments speak against PGD for later
    disorders since large costs are up front and
    savings are uncertain and very far in the future.

24
Justice and PGD Criticisms
  • Health care justice is about NEEDS. But parents
    at risk of having a child with CF or Tay Sachs or
    Lesch-Nyhan do not NEED to have children.
    Alternatively, they do not NEED to have children
    that are genetically their own. They have the
    option of cheaper alternative reproductive
    methods, such as sperm or ova donors.

25
Justice and PGD Criticisms
  • Ordinarily health care needs belong to a person
    who is actual and who is suffering and whose
    suffering could be relieved though available
    health therapies. But PGD involves a
    metaphysically odd situation in that we meet the
    alleged health need by REPLACING one future
    possible person with a different future possible
    person lacking some specific genetic
    vulnerability.

26
Justice and PGD Criticisms
  • An implication of the last criticism is that it
    would be morally permissible (not unjust) for
    society to provide resources for PGD in the case
    of early-onset genetic disorders. BUT this is not
    morally equivalent to saying that such social
    assistance is morally REQUIRED as a matter of
    justice. There may be too many other health care
    needs that make stronger claims of justice on
    limited social resources.

27
Justice and PGD the Disability Critique
  • PGD does not represent a threat to the rights or
    interests or dignity of persons with
    disabilities. The disability is dis-valued not
    the person with it.
  • Imagine successful embryonic stem cell research
    to repair devastating spinal cord injuries. Vast
    majority of SCI patients might readily embrace
    such a therapy, and we would be wrong to withhold
    it from them on grounds that this represented
    disrespect for persons with disabilities. Justice
    would REQUIRE funding this therapy for all
    desiring it.

28
Justice and PGD
  • Note 1 No social policy ought to require couples
    at risk of having a child with a serious genetic
    disorder either to use PGD or to refrain from
    having children. This is a clear implication of
    our social commitment to political liberalism.
  • Note 2 A just liberal society must provide
    social resources needed to maintain fair equality
    of opportunity for children born with serious
    genetic disorders.

29
Justice and PGD
  • Note 3 Couples who choose to avoid using PGD for
    religious or philosophic reasons (though at risk
    for having children with serious genetic
    disorders) must extend the same respect to
    couples who would use PGD in a liberal society,
    or who would advocate public funding for this
    technology.

30
Justice and PGD
  • Note 4 A JUST liberal society is one in which
    there are fair terms of cooperation, which is
    what is expressed on Note 3. A liberal society
    is one in which there is MUTUAL RESPECT for
    diverse reasonable conceptions of what it means
    to lead a goods life.
  • Note 5 Such mutual respect will be increasingly
    necessary for a peaceful liberal society in which
    genetic reproductive interventions become
    increasingly pervasive.

31
Physicians and the Future
  • Physicians will have to play a critical role in
    the social education and social conversations
    necessary to think through the ethical and public
    policy options that become available with
    advances in genetic technologies.
  • Physicians will be critical to protecting the
    liberal foundations of our society, most
    especially the patterns of mutual respect needed
    for maintaining just policies and social
    practices in these matters.

32
FANCONIS CASE
  • A couple has a child with Fanconis anemia. This
    child will die without a well matched bone marrow
    transplant. They wish to conceive via
    pre-implantation genetic diagnosis to identify a
    well-matched donor/ future child embryo. Q Is it
    morally permissible for good doctors to assist
    couples in achieving this objective?

33
The FUTURE Embrace It?
  • It took about 12 years to complete a map of the
    entire Human Genome. But a researcher at MIT is
    working on a technique for uncoiling an
    individuals DNA and having it machine-read in
    about three hours at a cost of about 1000. Is
    this a technology physicians and society at large
    should welcome? Why or why not?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com