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Reproduction in the Noughties: will the scientists have all the fun?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 June 2001

MARTIN H. JOHNSON
Affiliation:
Department of Anatomy, University of Cambridge, UK
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Abstract

The past 20–30 years have seen major advances in our understanding of human reproduction and in our ability to manipulate it, as well as major social changes in human reproductive and sexual attitudes. Many of these advances and changes developed out of the first successful in vitro fertilisation (IVF) of the human oocyte. It is also the case that 30 years ago few foresaw what was to come, and many were at best doubtful and often were very critical of the scientific work which led to human IVF and to many of the subsequent developments. This lack of foresight provides us with a lesson about the dangers that we face in looking forward and attempting to predict the future. This review will try to convey, not comprehensively but through examples, the flavour of current activities in Assisted Reproduction clinics and research laboratories around the world and what is being talked about for the future in respect of emergent patient demands and anticipated clinical needs. This clinically driven approach will form the basis for consideration of some underlying scientific aspects of reproductive research, some of the ethicolegal issues that may arise, and the implications of this anticipated future for our current approaches to medical education. The future will be considered not simply in terms of the New Reproduction itself but also in its interaction with the opportunities and challenges presented by the New Genetics. It is perhaps in the interaction between these two fields of endeavour that some of the most difficult challenges ahead lie.

Type
Review
Copyright
© Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2001

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Footnotes

Based on the Anatomical Society Lecture delivered at the Tripartite Meeting of the Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland, the Nederlandse Anatomen Vereniging and the Anatomische Gesellschaft in Cambridge, 24–26 July 2000.