Restricting Access to ART on the Basis of Criminal RecordAn Ethical Analysis of a State-Enforced “Presumption Against Treatment” With Regard to Assisted Reproductive Technologies

被引:0
作者
Kara Thompson
Rosalind McDougall
机构
[1] Royal Women’s Hospital,Centre for Health and Society
[2] The University of Melbourne,undefined
来源
Journal of Bioethical Inquiry | 2015年 / 12卷
关键词
Assisted reproductive technology; IVF; Ethics; Access; Criminal; Police check; Child protection check legislation; Presumption against treatment;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
As assisted reproductive technologies (ART) become increasingly popular, debate has intensified over the ethical justification for restricting access to ART based on various medical and non-medical factors. In 2010, the Australian state of Victoria enacted world-first legislation that denies access to ART for all patients with certain criminal or child protection histories. Patients and their partners are identified via a compulsory police and child protection check prior to commencing ART and, if found to have a previous relevant conviction or child protection order, are given a “presumption against treatment.” This article reviews the legislation and identifies arguments that may be used to justify restricting access to ART for various reasons. The arguments reviewed include limitations of reproductive rights, inheriting undesirable genetic traits, distributive justice, and the welfare of the future child. We show that none of these arguments justifies restricting access to ART in the context of past criminal history. We show that a “presumption against treatment” is an unjustified infringement on reproductive freedom and that it creates various inconsistencies in current social, medical, and legal policy. We argue that a state-enforced policy of restricting access to ART based on the non-medical factor of past criminal history is an example of unjust discrimination and cannot be ethically justified, with one important exception: in cases where ART treatment may be considered futile on the basis that the parents are not expected to raise the resulting child.
引用
收藏
页码:511 / 520
页数:9
相关论文
共 51 条
[1]  
Becker G(1992)Eager for medicalisation: The social production of infertility as a disease Sociology of Health and Illness 14 456-471
[2]  
Nachtigall RD(2005)Parenthood should be regarded as a right Archives of Disease in Childhood 90 784-785
[3]  
Boivin J(1996)Assessing the role of genetics in crime using adoption cohorts Ciba Foundation Symposium 194 115-123
[4]  
Pennings G(2009)The economic impact of assisted reproductive technology: A review of selected developed countries Fertility and Sterility 91 2281-2294
[5]  
Brennan PA(2004)Prevalence of depressive and anxiety disorders in an assisted reproductive technique clinic Human Reproduction 19 2313-2318
[6]  
Mednick SA(2007)Psychological impact of infertility Best practice and Research Clinical Obstetrics and Gynaecology 21 293-308
[7]  
Jacobsen B(2010)Lifestyle-related factors and access to medically assisted reproduction Human Reproduction 25 578-583
[8]  
Chambers GM(2005)Should older and postmenopausal women have access to assisted reproductive technology? Monash Bioethics Review 24 27-46
[9]  
Sullivan EA(2012)The many faces of autonomy Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 33 57-64
[10]  
Ishihara O(2004)The early history of IVF in Australia and its contribution to the world (1970−1990) Australian and New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology 44 495-501