Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Selling Babies? The Ethical and Moral Dilemmas of Surrogate Motherhood. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 7 page report discusses the moral and ethical concerns related to surrogate mothering. Surrogate motherhood agreements have been responsible for a great deal of public, governmental, religious, and legal debate. For some, the issue involves whether or not it is possible to legitimately establish a “commercial” contract for a biological process which involves the “production” and “transfer” of a human being. The report also considers the specific issues related to the issue from the perspective of nursing. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BWbabies.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
them. The expense, heartache, and physical trauma of dealing with infertility issues will typically leave prospective parents emotional wrecks who are determined to make that proverbial one last try
to have their own baby. Unfortunately, that determination, along with the emotional baggage it carries with it, has been know to cause them additional problems when they deal with
the various legal issues associated with reproductive technology and contract law. In their eagerness to have a baby, they could face a variety of legal dilemmas that will eventually
come back to haunt them. The same may be said for the woman who agrees to give birth to the baby. Even if she has been inseminated with the mans
sperm, is paid an agreed-upon fee, and has all medical expenses covered, it can be argues that she is actually selling "her" baby, regardless of any-agreed upon terms. Is
it possible to write a sales contract for a human baby? Can a man "buy" the child that was born from his insemination? What about the frozen embryos of a
dead woman? Could a grieving husband have those implanted in a willing woman and then claim custody of his and his dead wifes child? The new reproductive technologies that enable
infertile couples to have offspring raise a host of legal concerns, as well as moral and ethical issues. At least legal concerns offer some measure of guidance or structure. Of
course, ethics, personal choice, morality are almost always subjective realities. Personal or Contractual and the Story of "Baby M" Surrogate motherhood agreements have been responsible for a great deal
of public, governmental, religious, and legal debate. For some, the issue involves whether or not it is possible to legitimately establish a "commercial" contract for a biological process which involves
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