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Would You Like Fries with that
Embryo?
It's Not Adoption, Just 'Material'
Ottawa Wrestles Once Again With Embryo Ownership And Experimentation
(Canada)
Alberta Report Newsmagazine (now The Report- www.report.ca)
May 31, 1999
(Reproduced with permission.)
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by Marnie Ko
As a measure of how rapidly reproductive science is changing society, Canadians may be able to "adopt" a human embryo as early as this fall. Doris Cook, reproductive technology spokesman for the federal Department of Health, confirms that a comprehensive bill to regulate the use of human materials such as ova, sperm and embryos-issues that now are only loosely regulated by individual provinces-is being prepared. If, as expected, the new law addresses the issue of embryo adoption, Canada will set a legal precedent among nations. Observers are concerned that the new law may allow embryonic experimentation. Moreover, they say, the new legislation could unintentionally confer the status of "human being" upon the unborn. This is not the first time the Liberal government has tried to regulate human reproductive technology. But its previous proposal, Bill C-47, died on the order paper when Prime Minister Jean Chretien called the 1997 federal election. According to Ms. Cook, C-47 will serve as a basis for the next effort. It will be a "combination of prohibitions such as those in the legislation," she says, "but it will also contain a new regulatory component to provide a management framework for the use of reproductive materials." The possibility of embryo adoption springs from Health Minister Allan Rock's announcement two weeks ago that the Human Reproductive and Genetic Technologies bill will legislate the fate of surplus" human embryos-referring to babies between two to eight weeks of gestation. According to Ms. Cook, embryo adoption is viewed as a solution to the problem of the excess embryos created as part of an in vitro procedure for infertile couples. The in vitro fertilization process begins by inducing the mother to produce eight to 10 embryos; but only two or three are usually implanted and the rest are frozen. Rumours of unused embryos being given to other infertile couples continually circulate. But Ms. Cook says many are used for research purposes and others are destroyed through the "defrosting" process. Once defrosted, Ms. Cook says, "they can only be maintained a certain amount of time." Ms. Cook admits that allowing the creation of embryos solely for research purposes is another "contentious" example of the bill's scope. "Under the new bill, the creation of embryos just for research could be regulated instead of prohibited," she says, "and then be used to help understand infertility." Toward this end, the department plans to establish a "national regulatory body"
to govern any such deliberate creation of living human embryos for research-a Frankenstein
possibility that Ms. Cook acknowledges may not be popular with the general public. The
precise contents of the new regulatory
bill are not yet clear, Ms. Cook quickly adds, but many existing restrictions on the use
of human genetic material will be lessened, and things formerly banned will be
"regulated." He predicts the government will approach
human embryo adoption as a form of "donation of human tissue," using terms such
as "donor" and "recipient" to steer away from treating these human
lives as human beings with human rights.
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