Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: recent debates in maternal–fetal medicine – what are the ethical questions?
- 2 Overview: a framework for reproductive ethics
- I GENERIC ISSUES IN PREGNANCY
- II INCEPTION OF PREGNANCY: NEW REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGIES
- III FIRST AND SECOND TRIMESTER
- IV THIRD TRIMESTER
- V NEONATAL LIFE
- Index
1 - Introduction: recent debates in maternal–fetal medicine – what are the ethical questions?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: recent debates in maternal–fetal medicine – what are the ethical questions?
- 2 Overview: a framework for reproductive ethics
- I GENERIC ISSUES IN PREGNANCY
- II INCEPTION OF PREGNANCY: NEW REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGIES
- III FIRST AND SECOND TRIMESTER
- IV THIRD TRIMESTER
- V NEONATAL LIFE
- Index
Summary
This book is arranged by the stages of pregnancy – in part because it is intended for a clinical audience, in part because the stages of pregnancy offer a narrative framework for understanding the recent debates in maternal–fetal medicine. This introduction, however, offers a different kind of descriptive framework – a conceptual one. In the second chapter, Carson Strong complements this introduction by suggesting a normative framework for use in debating issues in reproductive ethics generally, and maternal–fetal ethics in particular. (Reproductive ethics would also include other more ‘high-tech’ areas such as reproductive cloning, which are mostly omitted from this book because at present they are not immediately relevant to clinical practice, no matter how many column-inches of newsprint they occupy.)
Judging by the interests of the authors collected here, who come from a wide international and professional range of backgrounds, recent ethical debates in maternal–fetal medicine can be grouped into four principal areas:
Power in the obstetrician–patient relationship, and the justifiable limits of paternalism and autonomy. Another less familiar way of phrasing this tension, as Jean McHale puts it in her chapter (6), is in terms of two dominant but conflicting rhetorics – ‘choice’ versus ‘responsible parenting’.
The impact of new technologies and new diseases. Here IVF (in vitro fertilization) and associated fertility technologies are twinned with HIV and AIDS because in both cases developments from outside ethical theory are driving ethical debate.
[…]
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Ethical Issues in Maternal-Fetal Medicine , pp. 1 - 16Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002