Ethics and Economics of Assisted Reproduction: The Cost of Longing
For those who undergo it, infertility treatment is costly, time-consuming, invasive, and emotionally and physically arduous, yet technology remains the focus of most public discussion of the topic. Drawing on concepts from medical ethics, feminist theory, and Roman Catholic social teaching, Maura A. Ryan analyzes the economic, ethical, theological, and political dimensions of assisted reproduction.

Taking seriously the experience of infertility as a crisis of the self, the spirit, and the body, Ryan argues for the place of reproductive technologies within a temperate, affordable, sustainable, and just health care system. She contends that only by ceasing to treat assisted reproduction as a consumer product can meaningful questions about medical appropriateness and social responsibility be raised. She places infertility treatments within broader commitments to the common good, thereby understanding reproductive rights as an inherently social, rather than individual, issue. Arguing for some limits on access to reproductive technology, Ryan considers ways to assess the importance of assisted reproduction against other social and medical prerogatives and where to draw the line in promoting fertility. Finally, Ryan articulates the need for a compassionate spirituality within faith communities that will nurture those who are infertile.

1143007633
Ethics and Economics of Assisted Reproduction: The Cost of Longing
For those who undergo it, infertility treatment is costly, time-consuming, invasive, and emotionally and physically arduous, yet technology remains the focus of most public discussion of the topic. Drawing on concepts from medical ethics, feminist theory, and Roman Catholic social teaching, Maura A. Ryan analyzes the economic, ethical, theological, and political dimensions of assisted reproduction.

Taking seriously the experience of infertility as a crisis of the self, the spirit, and the body, Ryan argues for the place of reproductive technologies within a temperate, affordable, sustainable, and just health care system. She contends that only by ceasing to treat assisted reproduction as a consumer product can meaningful questions about medical appropriateness and social responsibility be raised. She places infertility treatments within broader commitments to the common good, thereby understanding reproductive rights as an inherently social, rather than individual, issue. Arguing for some limits on access to reproductive technology, Ryan considers ways to assess the importance of assisted reproduction against other social and medical prerogatives and where to draw the line in promoting fertility. Finally, Ryan articulates the need for a compassionate spirituality within faith communities that will nurture those who are infertile.

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Ethics and Economics of Assisted Reproduction: The Cost of Longing

Ethics and Economics of Assisted Reproduction: The Cost of Longing

by Maura A. Ryan
Ethics and Economics of Assisted Reproduction: The Cost of Longing

Ethics and Economics of Assisted Reproduction: The Cost of Longing

by Maura A. Ryan

Hardcover

$179.95 
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Overview

For those who undergo it, infertility treatment is costly, time-consuming, invasive, and emotionally and physically arduous, yet technology remains the focus of most public discussion of the topic. Drawing on concepts from medical ethics, feminist theory, and Roman Catholic social teaching, Maura A. Ryan analyzes the economic, ethical, theological, and political dimensions of assisted reproduction.

Taking seriously the experience of infertility as a crisis of the self, the spirit, and the body, Ryan argues for the place of reproductive technologies within a temperate, affordable, sustainable, and just health care system. She contends that only by ceasing to treat assisted reproduction as a consumer product can meaningful questions about medical appropriateness and social responsibility be raised. She places infertility treatments within broader commitments to the common good, thereby understanding reproductive rights as an inherently social, rather than individual, issue. Arguing for some limits on access to reproductive technology, Ryan considers ways to assess the importance of assisted reproduction against other social and medical prerogatives and where to draw the line in promoting fertility. Finally, Ryan articulates the need for a compassionate spirituality within faith communities that will nurture those who are infertile.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780878408719
Publisher: Georgetown University Press
Publication date: 10/09/2001
Series: Moral Traditions series
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 9.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Maura A. Ryan is associate provost at the University of Notre Dame and coeditor of The Challenge of Global Stewardship: Roman Catholic Responses.

Table of Contents

Preface

Introduction

1. The Economics of Infertility
Myths and Realities in the Economics of Infertility
Intersection: Ethics and Economics
Distributive Justice and Assisted Reproduction

2. The Ethics of Assisted Reproduction
The Ethics of Assisted Reproduction
What about Adoption?
Reproduction and the Common Good

3. Assisted Reproduction and the Goals of Medicine
Infertility, Suffering, and the Goals of Medicine
Living with Infertility
Inside/Outside: The Medical Construction of Infertility
Some Preliminary Conclusions
Reflecting on the Goals of Medicine

4. Reconceiving Procreative Liberty
John Robertson and the Meaning of Procreative Liberty
Rights Talk and the Critique of Procreative Liberty, American-Style
Border Tensions
Procreative Liberty and Catholic Social Teaching
Conclusion

5. Assisted Reproduction and Access to Health Care
Human Dignity and Access to Health Care
A Decent Minimum
Sufficiency
Investments in Reproducing
Equity and Access
At the Boundaries
Setting Limits
Conclusion

6. Faith and Infertility
Mixed Messages and Missed Opportunities
Creating a Context
From Spiritual Crisis to Spiritual Quest
Conclusions and the Work Yet to Be Done

Conclusion

Index

What People are Saying About This

Paul Lauritzen

Instead of discussing reproductive technology in terms of privacy and rights, Ryan offers a compelling theological and ethical analysis of the world of reproductive medicine rooted in the tradition of the common good. Argued with exceptional care, this book is a singular contribution to the literature on the ethics of assisted reproduction.

From the Publisher

"Instead of discussing reproductive technology in terms of privacy and rights, Ryan offers a compelling theological and ethical analysis of the world of reproductive medicine rooted in the tradition of the common good. Argued with exceptional care, this book is a singular contribution to the literature on the ethics of assisted reproduction."—Paul Lauritzen, professor and chair of the Department of Religious Studies and the director of the Program in Applied Ethics, John Carroll University

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