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C O M M E N T A R Y
* SHOULD PGD BE CONSIDERED CASE BY CASE?:
B i o N e w s 170 - Week 5/8/2002 - 11/8/2002
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Last week, we reported on the story of the Whitakers, whose request for
preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) and tissue typing was refused by the
Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA). Now that the discussion
about the rights and wrongs of the request has died down a little, a broader
debate about how such requests are handled by the HFEA is emerging. Can the HFEA
continue to arbitrate on such matters, or is it time to go back to parliament to
reconsider the whole issue of PGD?
The HFEA's method of regulation, where particular uses of PGD are considered on
a case by case basis, has often been regarded as an open and honest way of doing
things. But the HFEA itself might now be wondering whether such an approach to
regulation is worth it. Considering the merits of individuals cases one at a
time (and turning some of them down) almost inevitably leads to a situation a
specific family with a heart-rending story, like the Whitakers, is pitched
against a rather faceless public body.
This personalisation of the regulatory process is precisely why there has been
so much support in the media for the Whitaker's request for treatment. The
Whitakers seem like a decent couple who just want to do all they can to save
their sick son's life - everyone can identify and sympathise with that.
Mary Kenny, writing in the Daily Telegraph, calls this approach 'ethics by
sentimentality', in which decisions about PGD are made on a case by case basis,
according to how deserving of treatment the particular people involved are. But
this didn't happen in the case of the Whitakers and that's what makes the
decision seem so cruel. Mr Whitaker himself, in an interview with the Daily
Mail, said of the HFEA: 'They didn't even listen to us. I'd asked to be there so
they could ask me any questions - to tell them what Charlie's life was like and
to meet us.'
By establishing a system whereby access to PGD is decided on a case by case
basis, the HFEA has perhaps puts itself in a no-win situation. Considering the
merits of individual requests seems like a fair and reasonable way of deciding.
But then to turn down a case like the Whitakers on what many have called a legal
technicality looks, to the untrained eye, like downright cruelty.
Perhaps it is time to reconsider PGD - not to restrict access to it, but to give
cases where the intention is to save or improve lives the opportunity to go
ahead.
- Juliet Tizzard, director, Progress Educational Trust
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Determinism and Language
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