Io Actsheet: Ethical Issues in A-Level Biology
Io Actsheet: Ethical Issues in A-Level Biology
Io Actsheet: Ethical Issues in A-Level Biology
3. How reliable and useful is fetal genetic testing at present and will healthcare personnel counsel parents correctly, and sympathetically, about the risks and limitations arising from genetic technology? Before individuals can give consent for procedures to be carried out they must be adequately informed about complex and controversial procedures, about how to assess genetic information for reproductive decisions and about the reproductive rights of parents and children. For example, parents may be told that the baby they are expecting is carrying the allele for cystic fibrosis. Should the pregnancy be terminated or should they allow the baby to be born? The fact that gene therapy is being developed as a treatment for cystic fibrosis may help the parents to decide to let the pregnancy continue, even though the baby will develop cyctic fibrosis. So that correct decisions can be made, it is important that genetic testing is evaluated and regulated for accuracy, reliability and usefulness. Genetic tests must be reliable and interpretable by the medical professions. At present there is little quality control of such procedures. Doctors, other health service personnel and patients must be educated about the new genetic capabilities, their scientific limitations and social risks. Quality control measures and the implementation of standards must be developed properly.
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Bio Factsheet
Abortion
Some people think that abortion is wrong in all circumstances because it does not recognise the rights of the fetus and it challenges the idea of the sanctity of all human life. Those who consider that an embryo, from the moment of conception, is a human being with full moral status, think that abortion is the same as murder. People with this view will not accept that it should be possible for women to legally obtain abortion, no matter how difficult the lives of those women and families are made as a result. Anti-abortion views are based on religious or moral convictions that every human life has an essential value, which is not reduced by any disability or suffering that may be involved for the person living that life. Abortion is seen, by many anti-abortionists, as the destruction of a fetus in which the pregnant woman is no longer interested. They worry that the availability of abortion on grounds of fetal abnormality will encourage prejudice towards any individual with a handicap. Some people who oppose abortion in general, concede that it may be justifiable in exceptional cases, for example, when there is risk to the mother's life - but only if abortion is the only option. It would not be justifiable to abort a fetus if the life of both fetus and mother could be saved in another way. Pro-abortionists consider that abortion is not wrong in itself and need not have undesirable consequences. They tend not to recognise fetal rights or to acknowledge the fetus to be a person. Abortion is considered to be a woman's right to exercise control over her own body. Abortion is considered as equivalent to a deliberate failure to conceive a child and because contraception is widely available, abortion should be too.
www.curriculumpress.co.uk There is great cost incurred by health services and rehabilitation centres to treat drug/solvent related diseases and to cure users of the habit. There is considerable cost incurred by the police and prison services in dealing with drug users and suppliers. There are personal costs involved due to loss of work, family upsets, and quite frequently, bereavements due to drug/solvent abuse
Bio Factsheet
In conclusion
This factsheet has tried to give a balanced view of some of the spiritual, social, ethical and moral issues involved in modern biology. It should be used as a basis to stimulate discussion. Exam questions on these topics, to date, have always been restricted to asking the candidate to state one or two ethical/moral issues relating to what has been asked in the previous part of the question. For example, in recent years questions have been frequently asked about the technique of animal cloning.
Acknowledgements This Factsheet was written by Martin Griffin. Curriculum Press. Unit 305B, The Big Peg, 120 Vyse Street, Birmingham B18 6NF Bio Factsheets may be copied free of charge by teaching staff or students, provided that their school is a registered subscriber. No part of these Factsheets may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any other form or by any other means, without the prior permission of the publisher. ISSN 1351-5136