Genetic Treatment and Preselection. Ethical Differences and
Similarities
By: Christian Munthe
Abstract
Medical genetic interventions can be performed in two ways.
First, genetic defects may be repaired (gene therapy). Secondly, a possible
future individual (an embryo or a possible combination of gametes) may
be preselected because of its favourable genetic make-up (by using genetic
diagnostic methods and procedures from reproductive medicine so called
Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis). The first kind of intervention means
that someone gets medical treatment in the normal sense, however, the second
kind does not. Rather, in that case, the potential patient is exchanged
for another individual who is in no need of treatment. The paper explores
to what extent arguments for and against these kinds of genetic intervention
apply equally to all of them. For example, may the benefits that can be
achieved through gene therapy be equally well achieved through genetic
preselection? Are fears of a resurrection of eugenic practices through
gene technology more warranted regarding therapeutic interventions than
regarding preselective ones (or vice versa)? Since genetic preselection
is an intervention at the germ-line level and is presently clinically applied:
How is it possible to motivate that clinical application of germ-line gene
therapy is not similarily permitted?
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