Saturday, August 12, 2006

chick eggs the next cash cow?

nature ran an article this week on the ethics and economics of human egg donation. the gist is that scientists and ethicists are concerned about whether to pay women for eggs obtained for research on therapeutic human cloning. paying women for their ova has gone on for a while... in our daily princetonian, we had the first national ad for egg donorship back in '97 ("looking for 5'8"-5'11", blonde, SAT >1400, female of Swedish descent to donate some eggs for $40,000"). america has continued to have occasional cases in which a couple will pay exhorbitantly for some cute eggs, though i think remuneration is outlawed in britain. but IVF and research are two different issues, and only a few known madcap opportunists--such as woo suk hwang, of south korean shame--have paid for (or coerced women into donating) human eggs.

on june 30th, a task force set up by the International Society for Stem Cell Research released a draft of guidelines, which simply demonstrate how little consensus there is on the issue. according to the article, it's open to public debate till september 1, at which point, i suppose, public debate is officially closed.

my current thinking is that the whole question is irrelevant. i go against the establishment on this one, but i'm actually against IVF in principle, since it necessarily generates unused embryos. if it hadn't been for these storehouses at hospitals and fertility clinics, there never would have been such contention about "what we should do with all these embryos from 30 years of IVF!" and we could have addressed the social policy regarding ES cells with a little more clarity. sadly, the 'byproducts' of IVF are still oft ignored (or forgotten) even by more conservative politicians... perhaps because its benefits have already been realized by the conservative community. at any rate, there are lots of issues here (not the least of which is the potential to solve more than one problem by adopting "at-risk kids") that require some ethical and scientific maturity. unfortunately, as jon stewart helps us recognize, we're not there yet. but, more to the point, because of the deep moral issues associated with the status of the human embryo, i'm not convinced it should be used for research using federal funding. private funding? not so sure... but with regard to whether the cash would put too much pressure on underprivileged women to undergo a dangerous, invasive procedure, we have a precedent. in america, private organizations pay habitually-pregnant crack addicts to have their tubes tied. sure, it funds their next couple of hits. but no matter how strong a libertarian you are, you've got to admit that it's a pretty good idea.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

> but, more to the point, because of the deep moral issues associated with the status of the human embryo, i'm not convinced it should be used for research using federal funding.

I agree. Although I personally support stem-cell research, the government should not take taxes from people and spend them on things that the people strongly disagree with. So it should be private funding.


> in america, private organizations pay habitually-pregnant crack addicts to have their tubes tied. sure, it funds their next couple of hits. but no matter how strong a libertarian you are, you've got to admit that it's a pretty good idea.

Actually i think it's ONLY the libertarians who think that's a good idea.


> the gist is that scientists and ethicists are concerned about whether to pay women for eggs obtained for research on therapeutic human cloning.

I briefly skimmed the article, and perhaps i misunderstand the issue, but i think i disagree with the approach it described. People seemed to be saying, let people donate eggs but don't pay them too much because then you're giving them an incentive to do something that may hurt them?

If you're so concerned for the women, then don't do the procedure at all. If you're going to let it go ahead, then the women should be paid as much as possible. Sure, paying people less will attract less people to the procedure, but then the people who do donate eggs are worse off than if they were paid in full, and those are the people that are being put in danger.

4:22 PM  

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