My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Feminism: Sex & gender discussions

Artificial wombs - Guardian article

21 replies

GoldfinchCharm · 25/03/2021 12:31

www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/mar/25/reproduction-without-pregnancy-emancipate-women-artificial-wombs

Is there already a thread on this? Sorry if so. Couldn't find one...

OP posts:
Report
moofolk · 25/03/2021 12:49

Scary stuff. Where is the line in science between whether it can and whether it should be done?

There are tons of ethical issues here, and not all of them outlined in the article.

I fear that they desire for this will mean that funding is found whatever ethical concerns remain.

Report
FlyPassed · 25/03/2021 13:00

I think it's a way off, but there's lots of money in fertility and a lot of powerful people who want babies on demand.

This podcast is interesting, amd worth a listen.

Crowd Science: Can We Make an Artificial Womb?
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3cswvxh

Report
TeckanandMultra · 25/03/2021 13:38

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

AssassinatedBeauty · 25/03/2021 13:46

The whole article irritates me, but I was particularly irritated by the claim that, should artificial wombs be developed, reproduction would become equal between men and women. Each would simply need to throw their gametes into the mix. This idea completely misses the process that women need to go through to collect eggs for fertility treatment. Injections for days, with side effects, risk of OHSS, the surgical procedure to physically collect the eggs, pain and recovery afterwards etc etc. Nothing at all like the sperm donation process.

It also misses the whole concept of breastfeeding - is that to be thrown out of the window too? If not, then no doubt women will need treatment to initiate and establish breastfeeding given that they wouldn't have been pregnant and given birth.

Report
Doyoumind · 25/03/2021 13:47

How does it emancipate women? Someone is still going to have to care for and bring up the child and is that going to be men taking time off work or working in childcare? No, it's fucking not.

Report
theThreeofWeevils · 25/03/2021 14:07

There is an interesting fictional treatment of external gestation technology in the wonderful Vorkosigan Saga by Lois McMaster Bujold, to which I was introduced by another poster on this board (thank you: you know who you are Wink)

vorkosigan.fandom.com/wiki/Uterine_replicator

Report
Gasp0deTheW0nderD0g · 25/03/2021 14:13

As usual, where's the concern for the baby in all this? As I understand it, babies get to know their mother's voice and heartbeat during the pregnancy, and that helps them to adjust to life outside the womb after birth. An artificial womb wouldn't provide that.

Report
MichelleofzeResistance · 25/03/2021 14:26

Not to mention women are barely allowed paracetamol during pregnancy because think of the baby, but whoopee, all the drugs for an artificially created and sustained pregnancy.

Baby with no need for attachment, no need for care over exposure to drugs, no need for a mother, in fact no feelings or personality or humanity at all. Meet the new must-have accessory.

On the plus side, there'll be huge money to be made in mopping up the massively traumatised, dysfunctional humans created as toys for grownups with too much money and no sense of responsibility.

Report
FlyPassed · 25/03/2021 15:07

Excellent points @MichelleofzeResistance

Have you listened to the Venus Rising podcast? Hearing from people who were conceived via various forms of assisted fertility was a real eye opener for me. Some are actually quite traumatised for example those created using a sperm donor. I cannot even imagine the impact on the child - throughout life - if they did not have a mother.

Report
OhHolyJesus · 25/03/2021 16:12

I was listening to Venus Rising today Fly!

It's really good and I also recommend The Fertility Business on Amazon Prime...derail over...as you were.

Report
MonkeyNotOrgangrinder · 25/03/2021 16:15

Not necessary and not ethical. Poor mice, quite apart from anything else AngrySad

Report
peanutbutterjimjams · 25/03/2021 16:23

Oh god. My first thought was that rich abusive pedophiles could just grow their own victims.

I feel sick.

Report
SquishySquirmy · 25/03/2021 16:24

Artificial wombs for premature babies is I think realistic in the near(ish) future.
Maybe in my lifetime.

Artificial wombs that grow healthy babies from conception to birth will remain as science fiction for a while though.

Artificial wombs that replace human pregnancy in a widespread way is an even more distant possibility.
Because even once it becomes technically possible, the technology would have to become incredibly cheap for it to be economically possible.
As grim as it sounds, to become widespread the technology would have to be cheaper than (or at least comparable to) the alternatives... and human bodies are cheap, especially in some parts of the world.

Report
MichelleofzeResistance · 25/03/2021 16:41

There is something disturbingly pathological about adults who can see a human child as nothing more than a blank slate for them to project themselves and their needs on to, and do not wish to be burdened with any concerns regarding the child's needs and interests in their getting of a baby.

It's the kind of view that would get a large red rubber stamped 'Not Approved' on the assessments for adoption. Its the kind of view that would get a social worker seriously concerned about the parenting capacity of a birth parent. This viewing of other humans as service providing units is spreading.

Report
zzizzer · 25/03/2021 16:56

The attachment disorder implications here are horrendous.

What a cruel experiment on someone this will be.

Report
SmokedDuck · 25/03/2021 16:59

@AssassinatedBeauty

The whole article irritates me, but I was particularly irritated by the claim that, should artificial wombs be developed, reproduction would become equal between men and women. Each would simply need to throw their gametes into the mix. This idea completely misses the process that women need to go through to collect eggs for fertility treatment. Injections for days, with side effects, risk of OHSS, the surgical procedure to physically collect the eggs, pain and recovery afterwards etc etc. Nothing at all like the sperm donation process.

It also misses the whole concept of breastfeeding - is that to be thrown out of the window too? If not, then no doubt women will need treatment to initiate and establish breastfeeding given that they wouldn't have been pregnant and given birth.

I just don't think technology of any kind can be fundamental in a quest for rights or justice or equality. Over-emphasis can actually undermine the distinct natures of the things you feel are not being treated equally with the result that we come to see the characteristics that define the group as inherently less desirable.
Report
Graffitiqueen · 25/03/2021 17:18

This is terrifying. Have none of them ever read Brave New World?

A mother's womb isn't just a jar. What about the baby's bond with it's mother which is developed in utero?!

the section on how it could affect abortion rights is also worrying. So many ethical and legal questions.

Report
alwayslucky · 25/03/2021 18:20

Climate Emergency. The very last thing the planet needs is extra humans. Stop all artificial reproduction and as much as possible stop the old type too. Those eager to parent will, unfortunately, find a plentiful supply of ready made humans needing loving care.

Report
merrymouse · 25/03/2021 19:02

The obstacles to growing humans outside the human body will be ethical and legal, not technological.

She forgot 'financial'.

Meanwhile many people don't have reliable access to clean water.

Report
HermitsLife · 25/03/2021 19:12

The main issue I have with this is that there seems to be a lot of money available to spend on stuff like this but on the other hand women and babies are still dying in labour, suffering life long and life changing birthing injuries, and women suffering multiple miscarriages and still births.

I'd prefer research going into existing maternity issues before going into stuff like this.

Report
Clymene · 25/03/2021 19:55

Where's the why? I don't believe it's to help pre term babies to live. If that was the object, the money would be thrown at understanding why - and preventing - women going into early labour. And into preventing women needlessly dying as a result of pregnancy and childbirth.

If maternal health and foetal health is at risk, physicians should always prioritise the life of the mother over the child.

Every day over 800 women die worldwide due to pregnancy and childbirth complications. In the U.K., black women are four times more likely to die in childbirth than white women.

This is nothing to do with saving lives but everything to do with men trying to control the process of giving life which is something only women can do.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.