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23 Med., Health Care & Phil. 1 (2020)

handle is hein.journals/medhcph23 and id is 1 raw text is: Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy (2020) 23:1-2
https://doi.org/1 0.1007/s 11019-020-09938-3
EDITORIAL
All in the family
Bert Gordijn'  Henk ten Have2
Published online: 13 January 2020
© Springer Nature B.V. 2020

The Encyclopaedia Britannica defines the family as a group
of persons united by the ties of marriage, blood, or adop-
tion, constituting a single household and interacting with
each other in their respective social positions, usually those
of spouses, parents, children, and siblings. (Encyclopaedia
Britannica 2019). Historically, the family-as a social unit-
has undergone significant changes, for example as a result of
technological innovations and associated societal transfor-
mations such as those during the Neolitic or the Industrial
revolution. These changes to the social structure of the fam-
ily have continued to occur in modern times as is evidenced
by the rise of single-parent families, reconstituted families,
same sex couples, cohabiting couples, and voluntary child-
less couples. Unsurprisingly, technological innovations and
societal transformations have not only changed the social
structure of the family. They have also altered its moral fab-
ric and thus triggered new questions of family ethics. The
first two papers in the issue at hand focus on two such ques-
tions. The first involves parental responsibilities, the second
filial obligations.
Parental responsibilities
New reproductive technologies have changed reproduc-
tion-both when it comes to knowledge as well as in terms
of control. Nowadays, prospective parents can access a lot
more knowledge about what is going on at any given point
in the reproductive process than has been possible at any ear-
lier time in history. Pregnancies have become epistemically
transparent. We can quite literally perceive the embryo in
the womb, sequence its genome and observe its developing
morphological characteristics. The amount of data and the
quality of the information around reproductive trajectories,

starting even before conception, has grown so much that
it has triggered a discussion about the prospective parents'
right not to know (cf. Sierawska 2015). Aspiring parents
now have to decide to what extent the they wish to use avail-
able knowledge about certain aspects of their reproductive
journey.
Together with improved knowledge, the possibilities to
intervene in reproduction have developed immensely. Here
also interventions are already possible before conception.
Examples are contraceptive methods to prevent unintended
pregnancies, and all kinds of assisted reproductive technolo-
gies such as cryopreservation of sperm and oocytes, artificial
insemination, in-vitro fertilisation and surrogacy. In addi-
tion, there are lots of interventions-both before and dur-
ing pregnancy-to lower the risks of neonatal and maternal
mortality and morbidity (Lassi et al. 2014).
Increased knowledge and control mean enhanced paren-
tal responsibility. For example, it makes a difference when
we know about certain negative effects of smoking dur-
ing pregnancy in terms of sudden unexpected infant death
cases (Anderson et al. 2019). The knowledge makes us more
responsible, assuming we have some control over our smok-
ing habit. Similarly, the availability of all kinds of prenatal
and even preimplantation diagnostic interventions, enhances
parental responsibility, presuming of course that parents
know about these diagnostic possibilities.
Against this backdrop, Wallis (2020) asks whether it is
ethical when parents select for deafness in their child. As
you can read in the current issue, the author concludes that
it may sometimes be ethical for parents to do just that (Wallis
2020). The point of this editorial, however, is that Wallis'
question is rather new. It results from improved knowledge
and enhanced parental control over the reproduction process,
which occasion enhanced parental responsibilities and new
ethical challenges.

Bert Gordijn
bert.gordijn@dcu.ie
Dublin City University, Dublin, Ireland
2   Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, USA

9  Springer

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