GENETIC ENGINEERING: EFFECTS
Question of Ethicality Raised
Many of the
questions surrounding the ethical use of genetic engineering practices are
difficult to answer with a simple yes or no. one good example would be
engineering, for example, the gender of the child. The answer revolves around
the method used to determine the sex selection and the timing of the selection
itself.
For instance, if
the sex of a fetus is determined and deemed undesirable, it can only be
rectified by termination of the embryo or fetus, either in the lab or in the
womb by abortion. There is every reason to prohibit this process. First, an
innocent life has been sacrificed. The principle of the sanctity of human life
demands that a new innocent life not be killed for any reason apart from saving
the life of the mother. Second, even in a country where abortion is legal,
one would hope that restrictions would be put in place to prevent the taking of
a life simply because it's the wrong sex.
However, procedures
do exist that can separate sperm that carry the Y chromosome from those that
carry the X chromosome. Eggs fertilized by sperm carrying the Y will be male,
and eggs fertilized by sperm carrying the X will be female. If the sperm sample
used to fertilize an egg has been selected for the Y chromosome, you simply
increase the odds of having a boy (~90%) over a girl. So long as the couple is
willing to accept either a boy or girl and will not discard the embryo or abort
the baby if it's the wrong sex, it's difficult to say that such a procedure
should be prohibited.
One reason to
utilize this procedure is to reduce the risk of a sex-linked genetic disease.
Color-blindness, hemophilia, and fragile X syndrome can be due to mutations on
the X chromosome. Therefore, males (with only one X chromosome) are much more
likely to suffer from these traits when either the mother is a carrier or the
father is affected. (In females, the second X chromosome will usually carry the
normal gene, masking the mutated gene on the other X chromosome.) Selecting for
a girl by sperm selection greatly reduces the possibility of having a child with
either of these genetic diseases. Again, it's difficult to argue against the
desire to reduce suffering when a life has not been forfeited.
But we must ask, is
sex determination by sperm selection wise? A couple that already has a
boy and simply wants a girl to balance their family, seems innocent enough. But
why is this important? This isn't a situation of life and death or even reducing
suffering.
But while it may be
difficult to find anything seriously wrong with sex selection, it's also
difficult to find anything good about it. Even when the purpose may be to avoid
a sex-linked disease, we run the risk of communicating to others affected by
these diseases that because they could have been avoided, their life is
somehow less valuable. So while it may not be prudent to prohibit such
practices, it certainly should not be approached casually either.