Back to Search Start Over

SAVIOR SIBLINGS, PROTECTIVE PROGENY, AND PARENTAL DETERMINISM IN THE AGE OF CRISPR-CAS.

Authors :
PFEFFER-BILLAUER, BARBARA
Source :
Chicago-Kent Law Review; 2021, Vol. 96 Issue 1, p173-211, 39p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The current state of technology and law allows for creating children, called 'savior siblings' for the purpose of transplanting their stem cells to cure an existing, sick sibling. If both parents agree, court oversight is unnecessary--even though the procedure is risky for both children. Ethical paradigms evaluating the legitimacy of the procedure focus only on the process of savior sibling creation and ignore considerations incident to later organ transplantation, i.e., issues of consent, autonomy, dignity, and best interests of the savior child. Legal analysis, which focuses on the best interest rule, leads to counter-normative results. Recent data, e.g., that 95% of such instances require invasive bone marrow transplantation, and technological advances such as gene-editing, further confound the analysis. This essay details the contradictions and conflicts in legal and ethical paradigms in light of recent data and technological advance and proposes that societal and biological input is necessary before the law or bioethics can provide consistent guidelines. It also puts us on notice of ethical conundrums sure to arise--even with existing technology--that we have failed to address, a sure harbinger of things to come. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00093599
Volume :
96
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Chicago-Kent Law Review
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
155119068