Literature DB >> 16485361

Canada's Assisted Human Reproductive Act: is it scientific censorship, or a reasoned approach to the regulation of rapidly emerging reproductive technologies?

Colin Rasmussen1.   

Abstract

After more than a decade of study, discussion and debate, the Canadian House of Commons and Senate have approved the Assisted Human Reproduction Act. Building on the earlier Bill C-47, which died on the order paper in 1997, the Act bans human cloning for reproductive or therapeutic purposes, payment for surrogacy arrangements, and trading in human reproductive materials or their use without informed consent. In addition, the Act significantly restricts research using human reproductive materials. This article compares the Act to legislative regimes in other nations with advanced human reproductive science. It concludes that while the Act has many laudable goals, it is flawed in that it tries to cover too much legislative ground. As a result it unreasonable impairs the ability of Canadian scientists to compete in areas such as stem cell research, and area that is expected to yield significant new approaches to treating human disease.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Biomedical and Behavioral Research; Genetics and Reproduction; Legal Approach

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 16485361

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sask Law Rev        ISSN: 0036-4916


  1 in total

1.  Implications and reflections on the 2010 Supreme Court ruling on Canada's AHR Act.

Authors:  Raywat Deonandan; Tarun Rahman
Journal:  Int J Womens Health       Date:  2011-11-29
  1 in total

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