Article Text
Abstract
Countries that abolished donor anonymity have imposed age limits for access to certain types of information by donor offspring. In the UK and the Netherlands, a debate has started on whether these age limits should be lowered or abolished all together. This article presents some arguments against lowering the age limits as a general rule for all donor children. The focus is on whether one should give a child the right to obtain the identity of the donor at an earlier age than is presently stipulated. The first argument is that there is no evidence that a change in age will increase the total well-being of the donor offspring as a group. The second argument stresses that the rights language used for the donor-conceived child isolates the child from his or her family and this is unlikely to be in the best interest of the child. Finally, lowering the age limit reintroduces the genetic father in the family and expresses the bionormative ideology that contradicts gamete donation as a practice.
- ethics- medical
- insemination- artificial
- legislation
Data availability statement
There are no data in this work.
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Data availability statement
There are no data in this work.
Footnotes
Contributors GP is the guarantor of this work.
Funding The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Competing interests None declared.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
Linked Articles
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- Ethics briefings
- Thinking ethically about genetic inheritance: liberal rights, communitarianism and the right to privacy for parents of donor insemination children
- Mitochondrial donation and ‘the right to know’
- Britain’s new preimplantation tissue typing policy: an ethical defence
- Ethics briefings
- Ethics briefing
- Donor conceived children shouldn’t have right to be told of their origins, says Nuffield Council
- The rupture of anonymity for sperm donors—a tangled web of conflicting rights
- More than 100 sperm and egg donors prove ready to reveal identity to offspring
- Differences between sperm sharing and egg sharing are morally relevant