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Read “Looking for the Family Tree” and answer the 3 questions. Please substantia

ID: 458443 • Letter: R

Question


Read “Looking for the Family Tree” and answer the 3 questions. Please substantiate your responses referencing applicable ethical concepts, principles, perspectives and/or theories.

1. Should a sperm donor be required to agree to reveal his identity to his biological children when they turn 18?
2. Mothers have no legal obligation to reveal to their children that they were born by the use of donor sperm. Should this fact be included on a child's birth certificate?
3. Should sperm banks be required to keep a registry of children born by the use of the sperm they supplied? If they did, then children born by AI would be able to find out easily whether they were related, even if they didn't know the number of the donor who provided the sperm used by their mothers.

Read “Looking for the Family Tree” and answer the 3 questions. Please substantiate your responses referencing applicable ethical concepts, principles, perspectives and/or theories.

1. Should a sperm donor be required to agree to reveal his identity to his biological children when they turn 18?
2. Mothers have no legal obligation to reveal to their children that they were born by the use of donor sperm. Should this fact be included on a child's birth certificate?
3. Should sperm banks be required to keep a registry of children born by the use of the sperm they supplied? If they did, then children born by AI would be able to find out easily whether they were related, even if they didn't know the number of the donor who provided the sperm used by their mothers.

Looking for the Family Tree The Donor Sibling Registry makes it possible for people who were conceived from donated sperm by artificial insemination to establish contact with their half-siblings-those whose mothers used the same sperm donor. Some donors are much more popular than others; reporter Amy Harmon found that dozens of women bought Donor 150's sperm from the Cali- fornia Cryobank. (See Social Context "Shopping the Sperm Supermarket") So far the Registry's website has connected more than 1000 half-siblings. The site makes it possible for a donor to shed his anonymity and make contact with his biological offspring. This doesn't happen very often, however. The half-siblings connected through the site say that it helps them develop a sense of family that is missing. By entering the name of a sperm bank and a onoumber onthe website, the ofispring of a donor nor number on the website, the offspring of a donor can sometimes find a match with others. When this ha appens, some of them say, they feel as if they are now doser to lling in the missing half of their family. er to filling in the missing half of their family

Explanation / Answer

1.A sperm doner should be required to reveal his identity to his biological children when they turn 18 because it is a human right for a person to know who their biological father and mother are.

2.The fact that the children were born by the use of donor sperm should not be included in a child's birth certificate in order to hide the shame and insecurity of the child's illegitimacy.

3.Yes,the sperm banks should be required to keep a registry of children born by the use of the sperm they supplied so that they will be able to find out easily if they were related