Involuntary childlessness: Lessons from interactionist and ecological approaches to disability

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Because many involuntarily childless people have equal interests in benefitting from assisted reproductive technologies like in vitro fertilization as a mode of treatment, we have normative reasons to ensure inclusive access to such interventions for as many of these people as is reasonable and possible. However, the prevailing eligibility criterion for access to assisted reproductive technologies-'infertility'-is inadequate to serve the goal of inclusive access. This is because the prevailing frameworks of infertility, which include medical and social infertility, fail to precisely capture and unify the relevance of certain involuntarily childless experiences as warranting assisted reproductive technology (ART) treatment. I argue that the least we can do for those who have an interest in accessing ARTs is to conceptualize involuntarily childless experiences in dialogue with interactionist and ecological models of disability, to outline a unified and more inclusive eligibility criterion.

Original languageEnglish
JournalBioethics
Volume37
Issue number5
Pages (from-to)462-469
Number of pages8
ISSN0269-9702
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

    Research areas

  • assisted reproductive technologies, childlessness, fertility, in vitro fertilization, infertility, reproduction, FERTILITY TREATMENT, INFERTILITY, EXPERIENCES, DISTRESS, SUPPORT, ACCESS, WOMEN, MODEL

ID: 342492158