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The end of sex and the future of human reproduction / Henry T. Greely

By: Greely, Henry T [author].
Publisher: Cambridge, Massachusetts : Harvard University Press, 2016Description: viii, 381 pages ; 25 cm.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780674728967.Subject(s): Preimplantation genetic diagnosis | Preimplantation genetic diagnosis -- Moral and ethical aspects | Human reproduction | Preimplantation DiagnosisGenre/Form: Print books.DDC classification: 618.3/042
Contents:
Part I. Science -- Cells, chromosomes, DNA, genomes, and genes -- Reproduction: in general and in humans -- Infertility and assisted reproduction -- Genetics -- Genetic testing -- Stem cells -- First interlude. Easy PGD: the possibilities -- Part II. The pathway -- The path to the future: genetic analysis -- The path to the future: making gametes -- The path to the future: research investments, industry, medical professionals, and health care financing -- The path to the future: legal factors -- The path to the future: politics -- Farther down the path: some other possible uses of new technologies in reproduction -- Second interlude. Easy PGD: the future -- Implications -- Safety -- Family relationships -- Fairness, justice, and equality -- Coercion -- Just plain wrong -- Enforcement and implementation -- Conclusion. Choices
Summary: "Advances in several different areas of the biosciences are coming together in ways that will change human reproduction forever. Vast improvements in the speed, accuracy, and cost of sequencing the entire human genome greatly increases the genetic information prospective parents can learn about their possible children. Rapid progress in stem cell research makes it likely that in twenty years or so, we will be able to make eggs and sperm from the skin cells of people--mature people, old people, children, and even from cells from the dead or the never born. Combining the eggs and sperm will make embryos in a potentially limitless supply; using a technique called preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD), which has been in limited but safe use in people for over twenty-five years, a few cells can be plucked from those embryos and have their genomes entirely sequenced. The result, which the author calls "Easy PGD," will give parents (or others) unprecedented power to select embryos for transfer into wombs and eventual birth as babies, based their predictable genetic traits. Those traits will include early-onset and terrible diseases; other, later or lesser, disease risks; cosmetic traits, some behavioral traits; and, last but not least "boy or girl." This book describes the background science of Easy PGD, lays out its pathway to widespread acceptance and use, and explores some of the many ethical, legal, and social issues it will raise. One thing seems very clear: after Easy PGD, making babies will change forever--and so will humanity."--Provided by publisher
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Current location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
On Shelf RG628.3.P74 G74 2016 (Browse shelf) Available AU0000000005602
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references and index

Part I. Science -- Cells, chromosomes, DNA, genomes, and genes -- Reproduction: in general and in humans -- Infertility and assisted reproduction -- Genetics -- Genetic testing -- Stem cells -- First interlude. Easy PGD: the possibilities -- Part II. The pathway -- The path to the future: genetic analysis -- The path to the future: making gametes -- The path to the future: research investments, industry, medical professionals, and health care financing -- The path to the future: legal factors -- The path to the future: politics -- Farther down the path: some other possible uses of new technologies in reproduction -- Second interlude. Easy PGD: the future -- Implications -- Safety -- Family relationships -- Fairness, justice, and equality -- Coercion -- Just plain wrong -- Enforcement and implementation -- Conclusion. Choices

"Advances in several different areas of the biosciences are coming together in ways that will change human reproduction forever. Vast improvements in the speed, accuracy, and cost of sequencing the entire human genome greatly increases the genetic information prospective parents can learn about their possible children. Rapid progress in stem cell research makes it likely that in twenty years or so, we will be able to make eggs and sperm from the skin cells of people--mature people, old people, children, and even from cells from the dead or the never born. Combining the eggs and sperm will make embryos in a potentially limitless supply; using a technique called preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD), which has been in limited but safe use in people for over twenty-five years, a few cells can be plucked from those embryos and have their genomes entirely sequenced. The result, which the author calls "Easy PGD," will give parents (or others) unprecedented power to select embryos for transfer into wombs and eventual birth as babies, based their predictable genetic traits. Those traits will include early-onset and terrible diseases; other, later or lesser, disease risks; cosmetic traits, some behavioral traits; and, last but not least "boy or girl." This book describes the background science of Easy PGD, lays out its pathway to widespread acceptance and use, and explores some of the many ethical, legal, and social issues it will raise. One thing seems very clear: after Easy PGD, making babies will change forever--and so will humanity."--Provided by publisher

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