The Discussions around Precision Genetic Engineering: Role of and Impact on Disabled People
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Precision Genetic Interventions
1.2. Precision Genetic Interventions: The Case of Germline Interventions
- (1)
- Genetic interventions should always be aimed at what is reasonably in the child’s best interests;
- (2)
- Genetic interventions should be almost as safe as natural reproduction;
- (3)
- We should avoid and discourage interventions that confer only positional advantage. This guideline addresses interventions aimed only at competitive success. Such interventions—shown in their crassest form in sports doping—lead competitors to subject themselves to increased health risks, whether from drugs or risky gene modifications, for little benefit because all competitors are soon compelled to do adopt them;
- (4)
- Genetic interventions should not reinforce or increase unjust inequality and discrimination, economic inequality, or racism. Neither race nor sex nor sexual orientation is a condition intrinsically needing genetic intervention. Any suffering resulting from these conditions derives from unjustified discrimination. If parents, in the effort to ease their child’s burdens, use genetic engineering to change the child’s skin color, sex, or sexual orientation, they risk fostering discriminatory attitudes and practices. In such cases, it is better to change social attitudes than to alter a child’s genes [22].
1.3. Precision Genetic Interventions: The Issue of Genetic Enhancement
2. The Case of Public Engagement
2.1. Background
2.2. The Role of Disabled People as Members of the Public
2.2.1. The Portrayal of Disabled People within the Genetic Intervention Discourses
Possible Portrayals of Disability So Far
Enhancement, the New Player in the Game of Disability Portrayal
The Portrayal of Disabled People within the Genetic Intervention Discourses
Gene editing may hold some promise for somatic gene therapy (aimed at treating impaired tissues in a fully formed person). However, there is no medical justification for modifying human embryos or gametes in an effort to alter the genes of a future child. Parents who wish to have children unaffected by genetic diseases can almost always accomplish this through other methods, including conventional embryo screening and selection procedures. While screening future children also raises significant ethical implications, it is far safer than experimentally manipulating the DNA of germ cells to produce genetically modified babies, and has less potential for widespread societal disruption.[81]
2.2.2. The Problems Disabled People Face
2.2.3. The Visibility of Disabled People within the Genetic Intervention Discourses
3. Precision Genetic Interventions and Legal Instruments
3.1. Precision Genetic Interventions, Legal Instruments and Disabled People: The Role of the UNCRPD
3.1.1. The UNCRPD and Various Gene Editing Interventions
3.1.2. UNCRPD and the Discriminatory Use of Genetic Information in the Workplace
In addition to establishing the privacy of genetic information, federal law should prohibit discrimination in employment or insurance based on genetic information. There are three reasons why Congress should take immediate steps to prohibit the use of such information by employers or insurers: First, it is inherently unfair to discriminate against someone based on immutable characteristics that do not affect their ability to perform a job; Second, the mere fact that someone has a genetic predisposition to a health condition is an unreliable basis to act on the risk that he or she will actually develop that condition in the future. Genetic tests do not show with certainty that any individual will eventually develop a disease or how severe their symptoms might be, and third, the threat of genetic discrimination leads individuals to decline genetic screenings and other health services to avoid revealing information that may be used against them.[136]
3.1.3. Genetic Enhancement
3.2. Precision Genetic Interventions, Legal Instruments and Disabled People: The Role of Genetic Related Legal Instruments
3.2.1. UNESCO’s Universal Declaration on the Human Genome and Human Rights
3.2.2. Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Dignity of the Human Being with Regard to the Application of Biology and Medicine: Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine
3.3. UNESCO’s International Declaration on Human Genetic Data
3.4. Further Thoughts
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
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Wolbring, G.; Diep, L. The Discussions around Precision Genetic Engineering: Role of and Impact on Disabled People. Laws 2016, 5, 37. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws5030037
Wolbring G, Diep L. The Discussions around Precision Genetic Engineering: Role of and Impact on Disabled People. Laws. 2016; 5(3):37. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws5030037
Chicago/Turabian StyleWolbring, Gregor, and Lucy Diep. 2016. "The Discussions around Precision Genetic Engineering: Role of and Impact on Disabled People" Laws 5, no. 3: 37. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws5030037
APA StyleWolbring, G., & Diep, L. (2016). The Discussions around Precision Genetic Engineering: Role of and Impact on Disabled People. Laws, 5(3), 37. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws5030037