When genes determine motherhood: problems in gestational surrogacy. |
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Authors: | E Shuster |
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Affiliation: | Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. |
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Abstract: | Gestational surrogacy in which a commissioning couple's egg and spermatozoon are united in vitro and the resulting embryo is implanted in a woman's uterus is, of all the new methods for overcoming infertility, the most genetically appealing. This is because the genes are often perceived as determining all aspects of human health, disease and even behaviour. Having a child with the genes of both parents has become far more attractive to most infertile couples than having one who is only genetically related to the father. However, gestational surrogacy has created a situation where one child has two mothers, each one claiming to be the 'true' mother having exclusive parental rights. Surrogacy arrangements also raise the question of the meaning of motherhood. |
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Keywords: | surrogacy/law |
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