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Reproductive medicine and Turner syndrome: ethical issues

Journal

FERTILITY AND STERILITY
Volume 98, Issue 4, Pages 792-796

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2012.08.036

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This article discusses the ethical issues raised by the medical responses to Turner syndrome (TS). It explores the issues and challenges faced by women with Turner, and by prospective parents of a child with Turner. It focuses on four issues: the use of GH to increase height; the use of third-party oocytes to enable women with Turner to become pregnant; the parental decision to remove and cryopreserve ovarian tissue from a child with Turner; and the termination of fetuses diagnosed with Turner. Many of the challenges associated with TS are directly or indirectly related to social attitudes and practices, from harsh teasing in school to health professionals' assumption that a woman will abort a fetus diagnosed with Turner. All the interventions designed to alleviate the difficulties faced by women with TS should be employed with caution, in part because they raise significant concerns about risk and consent; in part because they offer a medical response to problems that are to some extent social. (Fertil Steril (R) 2012; 98: 792-6. (C) 2012 by American Society for Reproductive Medicine.)

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