Keywords
AbortionSpontaneous
Congenital Abnormalities
Female
Health Status
Humans
Infant
Newborn
Infant
Premature
Informed Consent
Male
Obstetrics
Physician's Practice Patterns
Physician-Patient Relations
Pregnancy
Pregnancy Complications
Pregnancy Outcome
Preventive Medicine
Reproductive History
Risk Assessment
Truth Disclosure
Bioethics and Medical Ethics
Pediatrics
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http://jdc.jefferson.edu/pedsfp/33http://jdc.jefferson.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1033&context=pedsfp
Abstract
Advances in modern medicine invite the assumption that medicine can control human biology. There is a perilous logic that leads from expectations of medicine's control over reproductive biology to the expectation of having a perfect baby. This article proposes that obstetricians should take a preventive ethics approach to the care of pregnant women with expectations for a perfect baby. We use Nathaniel Hawthorne's classic short story, "The Birthmark," to illustrate the perils of the logic of control and perfection through science and then identify possible contemporary sources of the expectation of the perfect baby. We propose that the informed consent process should be used as a preventive ethics tool throughout the course of pregnancy to educate pregnant women about the inherent errors of human reproduction, the highly variable clinical outcomes of these errors, the limited capacity of medicine to detect these errors, and the even more limited capacity to correct them.Date
2010-08-01Type
textIdentifier
oai:jdc.jefferson.edu:pedsfp-1033http://jdc.jefferson.edu/pedsfp/33
http://jdc.jefferson.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1033&context=pedsfp