Ethics of Prenatal Diagnosis and Intervention

Ethics of Prenatal Diagnosis and Intervention

Ethics of Prenatal Diagnosis and Intervention

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Foundations & Principles - Ethics Primer

  • Key ethical pillars: Autonomy, Beneficence, Non-maleficence, Justice.
  • Autonomy: Patient's right to informed choice; comprehensive consent essential for prenatal tests/interventions.
  • Beneficence: Act in best interest of mother & fetus.
  • Non-maleficence: "Do no harm"; minimize risks.
  • Justice: Fair resource allocation; avoid discrimination.
  • Confidentiality of genetic information paramount.
  • Mandatory pre & post-test genetic counseling.

⭐ Full informed consent includes discussing test accuracy, limitations, implications, and alternatives.

Prenatal Screening - Early Clues, Ethical Qs

  • Identifies ↑risk of fetal anomalies (e.g., aneuploidy); not diagnostic. Crucial for early awareness.
  • Ethical Dilemmas:
    • Autonomy: Informed choice, right to know/not know.
    • Non-maleficence: Anxiety from false positives, risk of invasive follow-up.
    • Beneficence: Enables preparation, potential interventions.
    • Justice: Ensuring equitable access to screening.
  • Considerations: Disclosure, societal pressures, disability perspectives.
![Doctor discusses prenatal screening with patient](https://ylbwdadhbcjolwylidja.supabase.co/storage/v1/object/public/notes/L1/Obstetrics_and_Gynecology_Reproductive_Ethics_Ethics_of_Prenatal_Diagnosis_and_Intervention/d00a83b2-866a-4717-9b5e-de6ca343e16c.jpg)
> ⭐ Informed consent for prenatal screening must detail test limitations, false positive/negative risks, and post-result choices.

Prenatal Diagnosis - Deeper Dives, Tough Calls

  • Informed Consent: Essential for invasive tests (CVS, amniocentesis). Covers risks, benefits, limitations.
  • Autonomy: Patient's right to choose/refuse testing & interventions.
  • Ethical Pillars:
    • Beneficence: Benefit to fetus/family.
    • Non-maleficence: Minimize harm (procedure risks, distress).
  • Disclosure: Sensitive, timely result disclosure, including incidental findings.
  • Counseling: Non-directive counseling crucial pre- & post-test.
  • ⚠️ Misuse: Sex selection (PCPNDT Act); eugenic concerns.

⭐ The PCPNDT Act (Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques Act, 1994) is key in India to prevent female foeticide and arrest declining sex ratio.

Fetal Interventions - Healing Womb, Ethical Maze

  • Aim: Improve outcomes for select fetal anomalies (e.g., Twin-to-Twin Transfusion Syndrome, spina bifida).
  • Methods: Medical (e.g., corticosteroids for lung maturity), surgical (open, fetoscopic).
  • Ethical Pillars (📌 ABnJ):
    • Autonomy: Respecting maternal decisions.
    • Beneficence: Promoting fetal well-being.
    • Non-maleficence: Minimizing harm to both mother and fetus.
    • Justice: Ensuring fair access to interventions.
  • Core Conflict: Balancing maternal risks against potential fetal benefits; experimental nature of some procedures.

⭐ The "dual-patient" paradigm, recognizing both mother and fetus as patients, is fundamental yet complex, especially when their best interests diverge.

  • Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act, 1971 (Amended 2021):
    • Permits MTP under specific conditions & gestational limits.
    • Up to 20 weeks: 1 RMP opinion.
    • 20-24 weeks: 2 RMPs' opinion (for vulnerable women categories).
    • ⭐ No upper gestational limit for substantial fetal abnormalities (Medical Board opinion).

    • Grounds: risk to woman's life/health, rape/incest, contraceptive failure, fetal abnormalities.
  • Pre-Conception & Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (PCPNDT) Act, 1994:
    • Prohibits sex-selection & sex determination.
    • Regulates use of PNDTs for detecting specified abnormalities only.
    • Mandates registration of facilities & strict record-keeping.
    • Stringent penalties for violations. 📌 Remember: "Save the Girl Child".

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Informed consent is paramount before any prenatal diagnostic test, ensuring patient understanding.
  • Non-directive counseling must be provided, respecting patient autonomy in decision-making.
  • The PCPNDT Act strictly prohibits sex determination and sex-selective abortions in India.
  • Balancing beneficence (fetal well-being) and maternal autonomy is a core ethical challenge.
  • Maintaining confidentiality of sensitive genetic information is a key ethical obligation.
  • Ethical dilemmas arise with genetic enhancements versus therapeutic interventions.
  • Decisions regarding selective termination require comprehensive counseling and ethical scrutiny under MTP Act guidelines.

Practice Questions: Ethics of Prenatal Diagnosis and Intervention

Test your understanding with these related questions

All of the following statements are true regarding non-invasive prenatal screening (NIPT) test except:

1 of 5

Flashcards: Ethics of Prenatal Diagnosis and Intervention

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What are the components of the antenatal combined test (first-trimester screening)?_____

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

What are the components of the antenatal combined test (first-trimester screening)?_____

PAPPA + hCG + nuchal translucency

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