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Published in: Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 1/2021

01-03-2021 | Scientific Contribution

Is routine prenatal screening and testing fundamentally incompatible with a commitment to reproductive choice? Learning from the historical context

Author: Panagiota Nakou

Published in: Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy | Issue 1/2021

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Abstract

An enduring ethical dispute accompanies prenatal screening and testing (PST) technologies. This ethical debate focuses on notions of reproductive choice. On one side of the dispute are those who have supported PST as a way to empower women’s reproductive choice, while on the other side are those who argue that PST, particularly when made a routine part of prenatal care, limits deliberate choice. Empirical research does not resolve this ethical debate with evidence both of women for whom PST enhances their choices but also persistent evidence of recurrent problems between PST and women’s autonomous decision-making. While there have been attempts to remove challenges to reproductive choice, it has been argued that these challenges cannot be removed entirely. In this paper I provide a historical review of PST technologies’ development and in doing so provide a detailed insight into the root causes of this tension between the opposing sides of this debate. This historical account provides evidence that those who championed the early use of these technologies did so in order to achieve a number of wholly different goals other than women’s choice and empowerment. These different aims focus on scientific discovery and eugenic goals and, I argue, are irreconcilable with women’s choice and empowerment. It thus may not be surprising that the resulting practice of PST continues to resist compatibility with women’s choice and empowerment. Ultimately, by understanding the historical foundations of PST we can more effectively assess how to reconcile women’s reproductive autonomy with routine prenatal screening.
Footnotes
1
In this paper, I use the abbreviation PST for prenatal screening and testing.
 
2
1(1)(d) Section of the Abortion Act (1967) (UK) is an illustration of that. While from what has been discussed above, it becomes evident that women had not necessarily linked their demand for access to abortion with access to prenatal testing, such a link seems likely at legal level. Abortion Act (1967) permits abortions when a serious disability is diagnosed. For instance, looking at Section 1(1)(d) of the Act, for a lawful abortion it is required to establish substantial risk for the child to be born to be seriously ‘handicapped’-as indicated in the Section. Given that the means of election to establish such risk is PST, it is plausible to consider PST as a necessary means to justify abortion under certain circumstances. Following the use of PST, women can choose abortion. Essentially, it seems that the Abortion Act (1967) called for and justified the use of PST to some extent.
 
3
See for instance the “Report of UK collaborative study on alpha-fetoprotein in relation to neural-tube defects” (Wald et al. 1977) in which Wald et al. described the scientific basis of antenatal screening that “led to the first antenatal serum screening programme for birth defects” (Wald et al. 1998, p. 1).
 
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Metadata
Title
Is routine prenatal screening and testing fundamentally incompatible with a commitment to reproductive choice? Learning from the historical context
Author
Panagiota Nakou
Publication date
01-03-2021
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy / Issue 1/2021
Print ISSN: 1386-7423
Electronic ISSN: 1572-8633
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11019-020-09985-w

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