Changing Our DNA

Cures For Disability Or Making Designer Babies?

© Joanna Karpasea-Jones

Feb 25, 2008

Are new IVF techniques to create babies using three people, a miracle or a medical minefield?


I have a daughter, Alicia, who I thought was perfectly healthy. Although through her father's condition, I knew there was a 50% risk she would inherit a disorder, she had got to nearly 5 years of age without any signs or symptoms. I thought we were home free, that I was her mother and I would notice if something wasn't right.

Then it happened overnight. One day she was dressing and I noticed her toes had curled over. What followed were specialist appointments, blood tests and then the agonizing truth. All my hopes and dreams for her future were shattered in an instant. I felt angry, cheated, thrown into a world of genetic disorder that I didn't want to belong to. She still has a future, and likely a bright one, but it just wasn't the one I imagined.

So I would give anything to give her a vitamin or a stem cell or some type of treatment that would stop this disease, even if it meant hacking bits out of my own body.

I can see the advantage of using DNA from three people in IVF, as a mother on the disease side of the fence, but I'm still not in favor of it.

Why? No one knows what side effects using three people's DNA would cause to the baby. Who would be the baby's mother? As there are genes from two women, would that mean the baby would have two mothers? How would a child feel, when everyone else has a mother and a father but he has three parents? It reminds me of Frankinstein's baby.

As a disabled person myself, I can really see a time when IVF phases out any imperfection, and one day maybe natural conception will be deemed too 'risky' in a climate of perfect, laboratory produced 'designer' babies.


Post this Blog to facebook Add this Blog to del.icio.us! Digg this Blog furl this Blog Add this Blog to Reddit Add this Blog to Technorati Add this Blog to Newsvine Add this Blog to Windows Live Add this Blog to Yahoo Add this Blog to StumbleUpon Add this Blog to BlinkLists Add this Blog to Spurl Add this Blog to Google Add this Blog to Ask Add this Blog to Squidoo