Baby-making / Bart Fauser & Paul Devroey with Simon Brown.

Fauser, B. C. J. M. (Bart C. J. M.)
Oxford New York : Oxford University Press, 2011.
Added to CLICnet on 04/02/2014


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Notes:

  • What the new reproductive treatments mean for families and society –Dust jacket.
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 282-287) and index.
  • How to design a baby — What couples want and how we deal with it — The infertility epidemic — The right treatment for the right patient — In search of the embryo guaranteed to implant — Infertility treatments for fertile people — Who pays? The social implications — How far can we go?
  • In the developed world, the fertility treatments available to couples in the 21st century are wider than ever before. Most types of infertility can be addressed by modern ‘test-tube’ methods, yet reproduction itself has become inextricably bound with social and political trends, such as declining birth rates, delayed first pregnancy, childbirth beyond the age of 40, and the state funding of infertility treatment. It is a topic high, high on the agenda of politicians in their efforts to reverse declining national fertility rates, and of intensive interest to more and more couples. Assisted reproduction increasingly reflects a lifestyle-choice that is immediately social, cultural, personal, and political. Doctors and professors of reproductive medicine, the authors relay their knowledge of this field’s many advances since the first live in-vitro fertilization birth in 1978. They give an account of the options available to couples today, including IVF, sperm injection techniques, egg donation, fertility preservation, single embryo transfer, reproductive surgery, as well as how they work and how they are used. These new technologies can allow many couples who would otherwise have been forced by genetic or physiological factors to remain childless to have a healthy baby, the best way, the authors argue, in which we should understand ‘designer babies’. But as assisted reproduction becomes more common, they also point out the wider implications for families and society as a whole. The authors review the technology, ethical dilemmas, and statistical results of many current practices, providing data from around the world. Looking to the future, they address controversial topics including cloning, pregnancy in older women, and posthumous reproduction. With sympathy for patients who undergo fertility treatment, the authors discuss techniques and outcomes in detail.

Subjects:

Requested by Kurpiers, R

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