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4. HOW IS ONE TO EVALUATE MORALLY RESEARCH
AND EXPERIMENTATION* ON HUMAN EMBRYOS AND FOETUSES?
Medical research must refrain from
operations on live embryos, unless there is a moral certainty of not causing
harm to the life or integrity of the unborn child and the mother, and on
condition that the parents have givers their free and in formed consent to the
procedure. It follows that all research, even when limited to the simple
observation of the embryo, would become illicit were it to involve risk to the
embryo's physical integrity or life by reason of the methods used or the
effects induced. As regards experimentation, and presupposing the general distinction
between experimentation for purposes which are not directly therapeutic and
experimentation which is clearly therapeutic for the subject himself, in the
case in point one must also distinguish between experimentation carried out on
embryos which are still alive and experimentation carried out on embryos which
are dead. If the embryos are living, whether viable or not, they must be
respected just like any other human person; experimentation on embryos
which is not directly therapeutic is illicit.(29) No objective, even though noble in itself, such as a foreseeable
advantage to science, to other human beings or to society, can in any way
justify experimentation on living human embryos or foetuses, whether viable or
not, either inside or outside the mother's womb. The informed consent
ordinarily required for clinical experimentation on adults cannot be granted by
the parents, who may not freely dispose of the physical integrity or life of
the unborn child. Moreover, experimentation on embryos and foetuses always
involves risk, and indeed in most cases it involves the certain expectation of
harm to their physical integrity or even their death. To use human embryos or
foetuses as the object or instrument of experimentation constitutes a crime against
their dignity as human beings having a right to the same respect that is due to
the child already born and to every human person.
The Charter of the Rights of the Family
published by the Holy See affirms: "Respect for the dignity of the human
being excludes all experimental manipulation or exploitation of the human
embryo".(30) The practice of keeping alive human embryos in
vivo or in vitro for experimental or commercial purposes is totally
opposed to human dignity. In the case of experimentation that is clearly
therapeutic, namely, when it is a matter of experimental forms of therapy used
for the benefit of the embryo itself in a final attempt to save its life, and
in the absence of other reliable forms of therapy, recourse to drugs or procedures
not yet fully tested can be licit (31)
The corpses of human embryos and
foetuses, whether they have been deliberately aborted or not, must be respected
just as the remains of other human beings. In particular, they cannot be subjected to mutilation or to autopsies
if their death has not yet been verified and without the consent of the parents
or of the mother. Furthermore, the moral requirements must be safeguarded that
there be no complicity in deliberate abortion and that the risk of scandal be
avoided. Also, in the case of dead foetuses, as for the corpses of adult
persons, all commercial trafficking must be considered illicit and should be
prohibited.
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