Australia to ponder sex selection
By Michael Cook
Ian Olver, chair of the Australian Health Ethics Committee
In an article in The Conversation the chair of the Australian Health Ethics Committee, Ian Olver, gives a number of reasons why this could be an appropriate change. He dismisses the notion of a slippery slope towards selecting for genes and creating designer babies:
“Aside from such choices not yet
being medically possible, the slippery slope argument may falter because
there’s no natural progression between approving non-medical sex
selection and approving being able to select other characteristics. Sex
selection is a discrete choice around which a definite boundary can be
drawn.”
Australians are already selecting the sex of their children, but they
are “forced” to go to overseas clinics, in places like the U.S. or
Thailand. Professor Olver says that this could be risky, because “not
all international clinics have the same standard of care that exists in
Australia.”Editor’s note. This appeared at www.bioedge.org and is reprinted with permission.
Source: NRLC News
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