Xenotransplantation and Risk: Regulating a Developing Biotechnology

Xenotransplantation and Risk: Regulating a Developing Biotechnology

by Sara Fovargue
Xenotransplantation and Risk: Regulating a Developing Biotechnology

Xenotransplantation and Risk: Regulating a Developing Biotechnology

by Sara Fovargue

Hardcover

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Overview

Some developing biotechnologies challenge accepted legal and ethical norms because of the risks they pose. Xenotransplantation (cross-species transplantation) may prolong life but may also harm the xeno-recipient and the public due to its potential to transmit infectious diseases. These trans-boundary diseases emphasise the global nature of advances in health care and highlight the difficulties of identifying, monitoring and regulating such risks and thereby protecting individual and public health. Xenotransplantation raises questions about how uncertainty and risk are understood and accepted, and exposes tensions between private benefit and public health. Where public health is at risk, a precautionary approach informed by the harm principle supports prioritising the latter, but the issues raised by genetically engineered solid organ xenotransplants have not, as yet, been sufficiently discussed. This must occur prior to their clinical introduction because of the necessary changes to accepted norms which are needed to appropriately safeguard individual and public health.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780521195768
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 11/17/2011
Series: Cambridge Law, Medicine and Ethics , #14
Pages: 306
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Sara Fovargue is a Senior Lecturer in Law at Lancaster University, where she specialises in health care law and ethics. Her main interests are clinical research involving human and non-human animals, risk and regulation with regards to developing biotechnologies and decision-making practices for vulnerable groups within health care law and practice.

Table of Contents

1. Introducing the issues; 2. Dealing with risk; 3. Regulating experimental procedures and medical research; 4. Regulatory responses to developing biotechnologies; 5. Challenges to legal and ethical norms: first party consent and third parties at risk; 6. Surveillance and monitoring: balancing public health and individual freedom; 7. Looking to the future.
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