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Bioethics

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Title: Bioethics


1
Bioethics
  • Dr. Chan Ho Mun
  • Associate Professor of Philosophy
  • Dept of Public Social Administration
  • City University of Hong Kong
  • June 26, 2006

2
What is Bioethics?
  • The term bioethics was introduced in the 70s
    by Van Rensselaer Potter for a study aiming at
    ensuring the preservation of the biosphere.
  • It was later used to refer a study of the ethical
    issues arising from health care, biological and
    medical sciences.
  • It is a major area in applied ethics.

3
  • The emergence of this new area of study has been
    triggered by and a response to the new
    scientific/technological developments in
    biomedical and life sciences.
  • Medical ethics and nursing ethics are more
    concerned with the ethics of the health care
    professionals and their relationship with the
    patient. Bioethics has a broader scope.

4
Some historical examples
  • Abortion
  • Contraception
  • Kidney dialysis machine (Who had the priority?)
  • Organ transplant, artificial ventilator, and
    brain death
  • In virtro fertilization (IVF)
  • Cloning and stem cell research
  • Genetic engineering

5
Main topics in Bioethics
  • Death and dying
  • Pre-birth Issues
  • Issues in human reproduction
  • Human cloning
  • Stem cell research
  • The new genetics

6
  • Resources allocation
  • Organ transplant
  • Doctor-patient relationships
  • Experimentation with human subjects animals
  • (The above list is not exhaustive.)

7
Human Reproductive Technologies (HRT)
  • Contraception sex without procreation
  • HRTs procreation without sex

8
  • Types of HRTs
  • Artificial insemination by husband (AIH)
  • Artificial insemination by donor (AID)
  • In virtro fertilization (IVF)
  • Egg donation
  • Embryo donation
  • Surrogacy

9
  • Ethical considerations (see references 6,7, 10)
  • Procreation rights of infertile couples
  • It is unnatural
  • Inequality and exploitation
  • Selling babies?
  • The moral status of extra embryos left over from
    IVF
  • Definition of parent-child relation
  • Integrity of the family
  • Best interests of the child

10
Human Cloning
  • Two techniques
  • Embryo splitting
  • Nuclear substitution
  • Embryo splitting
  • The clone is usually used for tests of
    abnormality, and will be destroyed subsequently.

11
  • Nuclear Substitution
  • What is the relationship between the nuclear
    donor and the clone?
  • The same person?
  • (Technologically-aided and birth delayed)
    identical twins?
  • Siblings?
  • Parent-child?
  • Should a homosexual be allowed to use the
    technology to obtain his/her own child?

12
  • Is it moral alright for parents to clone their
    beloved children who die young?
  • Should it be used as an infertility treatment or
    gene therapy if it is safe?
  • No third party is involved.
  • According to the parent-child ordinance in HK,
    whoever gives birth to a baby is its mother, and
    the husband who goes through the infertility
    treatment with her is his father.
  • Yet, human cloning has been banned by the HRT
    Ordinance.

13
Stem Cell Research
  • Stem cells undifferentiated, multi-potent,
    precursor cells, capable of developing into
    virtually any body tissue.
  • Three types of stem cells
  • Embryonic stem cells (ESC)
  • Fetal stem cells
  • Adult stem cells

14
  • Three main sources
  • Adult bone marrow
  • Miscarried or aborted embryos/fetus extra
    embryos left over from IVF
  • Embryos from therapeutic cloning
  • Potential Treatments
  • They may be used to replace damaged organ tissues
    (e.g., cardiac tissues), repair irreversible
    injuries (e.g., spinal cord injuries), or cure
    diseases (e.g., Parkinsons and Alzheimers
    diseases).

15
  • ESC is most promising for treatment, and
    therapeutic cloning can avoid the problem of
    immunological incompatibility.
  • Ethical issues
  • Destroying an embryo to harvest ESC is equivalent
    to killing a child to obtain his organs.
  • Left-over from IVF are already there.
  • Therapeutic cloning The embryo is not created
    for reproduction.
  • How about the wellbeing of many patients who may
    be cured by ESC research?

16
The New Genetics
  • Gene testing
  • Create unnecessary psychological distress
  • Discrimination by employers and insurance
    companies
  • Confidentiality and Privacy
  • Social stigmatization

17
  • Prenatal Screening
  • Sex selection Gender discrimination and
    imbalance of sex ratio unless it is done solely
    for therapeutic purpose.
  • Discrimination Lives of the disable are not
    worth living.

18
  • Genetic Engineering
  • Is it a form of eugenics?
  • Germ-line changes, unlike somatic modification,
    can pass onto the next generation and be with us
    forever. So germ-line changes could be very
    risky.
  • Is genetic enhancement moral?
  • See reference 10.

19
Doctor-patient relationships
  • Who has the final authority in medical decision
    making? The patient, the family or the
    individual?
  • Three models
  • Individualism
  • Familism
  • Medical Paternalism
  • See references 1-3.

20
Organ Transplant and Resources Allocation
  • One what criteria should organs be allocated to
    patients for transplantation? (See reference 5)
  • What is a just distribution of healthcare
    resources? (See reference 4)

21
References
  • 1. Chan, Ho Mun, Sharing Death and Dying
    Advance Directives, Autonomy and the Family
    Bioethics, Vol. 18, No. 2, 2004, pp.87-103.
  • 2. Chan, Ho Mun, Informed Consent Hong Kong
    Style An Instance of Moderate Familism, Journal
    of Medicine and Philosophy, Vol. 29, No. 2, 2004,
    pp.195-206.
  • 3. ??? ????????????????, ??????III4
    (2001?12?)?45-55?

22
  • 4. Chan, Ho Mun Justice is to be Financed Before
    It is to be Done A Confucian Approach to Hong
    Kong Public Health Care Reform, in R. Z. Qiu
    (ed.), Bioethics Asian Perspectives, Dordrecht,
    Netherlands Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2004,
    pp.207-228.
  • 5. Chan, Ho Mun, Cheung, Germain, and Yip, Ada,
    Selection Criteria for Recipients of Scarce
    Donor Livers a Public Opinion Survey in Hong
    Kong, (co-authored Germaine Cheung and Ada Yip),
    Hong Kong Medical Journal, Vol. 12, No. 1, 2006,
    pp. 40-46.

23
  • 6. ???????????? ?????????????????????
    ??????????? ?? 21????????? ??????????246-261?
  • 7. ???????? ??????????????????????????1997??
    137-155?
  • 8. Kuhse, Helga and Singer, Peter, A Companion to
    Bioethics, Oxford Blackwell, 1998.

24
  • 9. Holland, Stephen, Bioethics A Philosophical
    Introduction, Cambridge Polity Press.
  • 10. Tao, Julia, Whats wrong with creating
    designer babies?, in Julia Tao and Hektor H T
    Yan (eds), Meaning of life. Singapore McGraw
    Hill Education, 2006, pp. 317-335.
  • 11. Veatch, Robert M. The Basics of Bioethics 2nd
    ed., Upper Saddle River, N.J. Prentice Hall,
    2003.
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