Reproductive BioMedicine Online
Volume 20, Issue 7 , Pages 895-902, June 2010

The ethical debate on donor insemination in China

Bioethics Institute Ghent, Ghent University, Belgium

Received 17 November 2009; received in revised form 18 January 2010; accepted 26 January 2010. published online 20 April 2010.

Declaration: The authors report no financial or commercial conflicts of interest.

Abstract 

This article gives an overview of the ethical thinking about donor insemination among Chinese ethicists. We analysed the ethical arguments dedicated to the use of donor spermatozoa published in the important bioethics journals of China of the last 15years. On the one hand, the general Confucian values strongly favour the genetic link as it fits with the traditional importance attached to the continuation of the family line. Therefore, artificial insemination by donor (AID) is highly controversial in China because the involvement of a third party (the donor) severs the genetic link between the husband and his family. On the other hand, procreation is regarded as an important aspect of Confucian filial piety and it is a basic right of every human being to enjoy a family life. AID should be thought of as a means to help infertile couples to overcome infertility. Nowadays, Chinese bioethicists are trying to reinterpret Confucianism in order to adapt it to modernity. One such reinterpretation focuses on the affectionate rather than the genetic tie between parents and child. As the application is still new in China, more discussion and open debate on ethical aspects is needed.

Keywords: artificial insemination by donor (AID), confucianism, ethics, procreation, sperm bank

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 Juhong Liao became a master in Applied Computer Science and in Pharmaceutical Science before turning to the field of ethics. She is currently working as a researcher at the Bioethics Institute Ghent on Chinese ethics. She will focus on the ethical positions developed regarding medical research, stem cell research and medically assisted reproduction in China.

PII: S1472-6483(10)00050-7

doi:10.1016/j.rbmo.2010.01.014

Reproductive BioMedicine Online
Volume 20, Issue 7 , Pages 895-902, June 2010