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  1. Young people’s awareness on biobanking and DNA profiling: results of a questionnaire administered to Italian university students.Pamela Tozzo, Antonio Fassina & Luciana Caenazzo - 2017 - Life Sciences, Society and Policy 13 (1):1-12.
    Current policy approaches to social and ethical issues surrounding biobanks manifest lack of public information given by researchers and government, despite the evidence that Italian citizens are well informed about technical and other public perspectives of biotechnologies. For this reason, the focus of our survey was to interview our University’s students on these aspects. The sample consisted of Padua University students, who were administered a questionnaire comprising eight questions covering their knowledge about biobanks, their perception of the related benefits and (...)
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  • Egg freezing for non-medical uses: the lack of a relational approach to autonomy in the new Israeli policy and in academic discussion.Shiri Shkedi-Rafid & Yael Hashiloni-Dolev - 2012 - Journal of Medical Ethics 38 (3):154-157.
    Recently, the Israel National Bioethics Council (INBC) issued recommendations permitting egg freezing to prevent both disease- and age-related fertility decline. The INBC report forms the basis of Israel's new policy, being one of the first countries to regulate and authorise egg freezing for what it considers to be non-medical (ie, social) uses. The ethical discussion in the INBC report is reviewed and compared with the scant ethical discourse in the academic literature on egg freezing as a means of preventing age-related (...)
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  • Reproductive Rights without Resources or Recourse.Kimberly Mutcherson - 2017 - Hastings Center Report 47 (s3):S12-S18.
    The U.S. Supreme Court declared procreation to be a fundamental right in the early twentieth century in a case involving Oklahoma's Habitual Criminal Sterilization Act, an act that permitted unconsented sterilization of individuals convicted of certain crimes. The right that the Court articulated in that case is a negative right: it requires that the government not place unjustified roadblocks in the way of people seeking to procreate, but it does not require the government to take positive steps to help people (...)
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  • ‘Social’ egg freezing and the UK's statutory storage time limits.Emily Jackson - 2016 - Journal of Medical Ethics 42 (11):738-741.
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