Korean Journal of Medical Ethics
The Korean Society for Medical Ethics
Article

착상전진단의 윤리적 문제점들*

구인회1
In-Hoe KU1
1가톨릭대학교 가톨릭생명윤리연구소
1Catholic Institute of Bioethics, Catholic University

ⓒ Copyright 2003 The Korean Society for Medical Ethics. This is an Open-Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Published Online: Dec 30, 2003

ABSTRACT

The ability to diagnose genetic diseases early in pregnancy has already demonstrated the power of remarkable forms of technology and stimulated innumerable ethical debates. Now the diagnosis of genetic disease even before implantation provides new possibilities and adds to the ethical problems we face. There is a considerable difference between the wish to have a child and the desire to have a perfect child.

As long as a pre-implantation diagnosis continues to require testing after embryo-transfer by an additional prenatal diagnosis test in order to ensure its results, at this stage of technology, there is no ethically sufficient reason to utilize pre-implantation diagnosis. At a future date, this problem must be discussed in greater detail. In this discussion, there is one perspective that must not be lost from sight: after prenatal diagnosis, at least theoretically, there is the possibility that a couple will decide to carry a genetically abnormal fetus to full-term. In the context of pre-implantation diagnosis and in vitro fertilization the decision making process for couples is eliminated; the genetically abnormal embryo will not be implanted.

The question of the moral status of human life in its early stages - of its biological, social and personal attributes continue to be philosophically controversial and in need of exploration.

Keywords: 착상전진단; 배아의 도덕적지위; 연속성논증
Keywords: pre-implantation diagnosis; genetically abnormal embryo; argumentation of continuity