To name or not to name? An overview of the social and ethical issues raised by removing anonymity from sperm donors.

Asian Journal of Andrology
Jennifer A Burr

Abstract

The aim of this paper is to focus on the ethical issues raised by the removal of anonymity from sperm donors. The increasing currency of a 'right to genetic truth' is clearly visible in the drive to revise the legislation on donor anonymity in Western and European countries. The ethical debate is polarized between the 'right to privacy' of the donor or parent and the 'right to know' of the prospective child. However, it is evident that religious, social and cultural attitudes have an overarching impact on attitudes towards sperm donation generally and anonymity specifically. In Asian countries, the social and cultural heritage is hugely diverse and different from those of the West. This review considers the research exploring the complexity of ethical issues informing this debate, and argues that parent's decisions to reveal donor insemination origins to their children are highly complex and relate to a range of social and cultural attitudes that have not been addressed within the policy to remove anonymity from sperm donors.

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Citations

May 31, 2011·Asian Journal of Andrology·Ping PingZheng Li
Apr 6, 2013·The American Journal of Bioethics : AJOB·An Ravelingien, Guido Pennings
Jan 25, 2012·Obstetrics and Gynecology International·Paul R Brezina, Yulian Zhao
Feb 8, 2014·Clinical and Experimental Reproductive Medicine·David J WalshAnthony Ph Walsh
Aug 10, 2016·Reproductive Biomedicine Online·An RavelingienGuido Pennings

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