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Wiley InterScience

Sociology of Health & Illness

Sociology of Health & Illness

Volume 29 Issue 7, Pages 1091 - 1106

Published Online: 6 Jun 2007

Journal compilation © 2010 Blackwell Publishing and the Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness



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Choosing embryos: ethical complexity and relational autonomy in staff accounts of PGD
Kathryn Ehrich 1 , Clare Williams 1 , Bobbie Farsides 2 , Jane Sandall 3 and Rosamund Scott 4
  1 School of Social Science and Public Policy, King's College London
  2 Brighton and Sussex Medical School
  3 Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwifery, Kings College London
  4 Centre for Medical Law and Ethics, King's College London
Address for correspondence: Kathryn Ehrich, School of Social Science and Public Policy, King's College London, The Strand, London WC2R 2LS
e-mail: kathryn.ehrich@kcl.ac.uk
Copyright © 2007 The Authors
Journal compilation © 2007 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness/Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
genetics • choice • ethics • PGD • relational autonomy

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionClinical backgroundRelational autonomyMethodsReferences

The technique of preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) is commonly explained as a way of checking the genes of embryos produced by IVF for serious genetic diseases. However, complex accounts of this technique emerged during ethics discussion groups held for PGD staff. These form part of a study exploring the social processes, meanings and institutions that frame and produce 'ethical problems' for practitioners, scientists and others working in the specialty of PGD in the UK. Two 'grey areas' raised by staff are discussed in terms of how far staff are, or in the future may be, able to support autonomous choices of women/couples: accepting 'carrier' embryos within the goal of creating a 'healthy' child; and sex selection of embryos for social reasons. These grey areas challenged the staff's resolve to offer individual informed choice, in the face of their awareness of possible collective social effects that might ensue from individual choices. We therefore argue that these new forms of choice pose a challenge to conventional models of individual autonomy used in UK genetic and reproductive counselling, and that 'relational autonomy' may be a more suitable ethical model to describe the ethical principles being drawn on by staff working in this area.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1467-9566.2007.01021.x About DOI

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