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Lost property? Legal compensation for destroyed sperm: a reflection and comparison drawing on UK and French perspectives
  1. Sean Cordell1,
  2. Florence Bellivier2,
  3. Heather Widdows1,
  4. Christine Noiville3
  1. 1Department of Philosophy, School of Philosophy, Theology & Religion, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
  2. 2Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense, Nanterre, France
  3. 3CNRS-Université Paris I, France
  1. Correspondence to Sean Cordell, Department of Philosophy, School of Philosophy, Theology & Religion, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK; sean.68{at}live.com

Abstract

In a recent case in the UK, six men stored their sperm before undergoing chemotherapy treatment for cancer in case they proved to be infertile after the treatment. The sperm was not properly stored and as a result was inadvertently destroyed. The men sued the NHS Trust that stored the sperm and were in the end successful.

This paper questions the basis on which the judgement was made and the rationale behind it, namely that the men ‘had ownership’ of the sperm, and that compensation was thus due on the grounds that the men's property had been destroyed. We first argue that the claim is erroneous and enhances the tendency towards the commodification of body parts. We then suggest that the men could have been compensated for the harm done to them without granting property rights, and that this would, at least in philosophical and ethical terms, have been more appropriate. To help illustrate this, we draw on a parallel case in French law in which a couple whose embryos had been destroyed were overtly denied ownership rights in them. Finally, we suggest some possible ethical and practical problems if the proprietary view expressed in the UK ruling were to become dominant in law, with particular focus on the storing of genetic information in biobanks. We conclude that, although compensation claims should not necessarily be ruled out, a ‘no property in the body’ approach should be the default position in cases of detached bodily materials, the alternative being significantly ethically problematic.

  • Property
  • Yearworth
  • sperm
  • commodification
  • biobanks
  • law
  • philosophical ethics
  • philosophy of medicine

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Footnotes

  • Competing interests None.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

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