Procreation after Death or Mental Incompetence: Medical Advance or Technology Gone Awry?

Fertility and sterility, 66(6), 889-895

DOI 10.1016/S0015-0282(16)58680-4 PMID 8941051 Source

Abstract

Objective

To review our experience with semen retrieval in men who are incompetent or dead and to formulate general medical, legal, and ethical guidelines for practitioners.

Design

Case series and literature review.

Setting

Academic. PATIENT(S): Seven incompetent or neurologically dead individuals in whom sperm retrieval was requested. INTERVENTION(S): Electroejaculation. RESULT(S): Seminal emission was induced in the two men who underwent electroejaculation. Sperm suitable for cryopreservation was obtained in one of these men. Review of the legal and ethical implications of such procedures led to development of general guidelines for determining whether gamete retrieval should be performed when requested. Issues of procreational autonomy, consideration of the decedent's wishes, and assurance of the well-being of any new life created were considered most strongly in the formation of these guidelines. CONCLUSION(S): Although the retrieval of sperm from deceased or incompetent individuals may be achieved readily, it is incumbent upon the practitioner to consider the legal and moral implications of these procedures before proceeding.

Topics

posthumous sperm retrieval ethics, electroejaculation deceased patient, gamete retrieval incompetent individuals, sperm cryopreservation after death, reproductive autonomy deceased, bioethics posthumous reproduction, legal issues sperm retrieval, procreation after death, neurologically dead sperm collection, andrology ethical guidelines

Cite this article

Ohl, D. A., Park, J., & Cohen, C. (1996). Procreation after Death or Mental Incompetence: Medical Advance or Technology Gone Awry?. *Fertility and sterility*, *66*(6), 889-895. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0015-0282(16)58680-4

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