The ART of marketing babies
Author(s) -
Imrana Qadeer
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
indian journal of medical ethics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.204
H-Index - 16
eISSN - 0975-5691
pISSN - 0974-8466
DOI - 10.20529/ijme.2010.079
Subject(s) - consumerism , legislation , context (archaeology) , population , poverty , public relations , reproductive technology , economic growth , sociology , political science , law , business , economics , medicine , environmental health , embryo , paleontology , embryogenesis , biology , microbiology and biotechnology
New legislation can be oppressive for a significant population depending upon the politics of its drafters. The current upsurge of the surrogacy trade in India, and the label of a "win-win" situation that it has acquired, points towards an unfettered commercialisation of assisted reproductive technology and the practice of surrogacy that is blinding its middle class users as well as providers, policy makers and law makers, and charging an imagination that is already caught up in spiralling consumerism. This paper analyses the Draft Assisted Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Bill and Rules, 2008, in the Indian socioeconomic context. It identifies the interests of the affected women, and examines the contradictions of the proposed Bill with their interests, as well as with current health and population policies, confining itself to the handling of surrogacy and not the entire content of the Bill. The bases of the analytical perspective used are: the context of poverty and the health needs of the Indian population; the need to locate surrogacy services within the overall public health service context and its epidemiological basis; the need to restrain direct human experimentation for the advancement of any technology; the use of safer methods; and, finally, the rights of surrogate mothers and their babies, in India, as opposed to the compulsion or dynamics of the medical market and reproductive tourism.
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