Thursday, February 22, 2024

Alabama Embryo Ruling

 We are very Pro Life and I’m guessing that almost all my readers are also Pro Life.  So what do we make of this ruling out of Alabama that is declaring embryos sitting in freezers as “children”?  If this holds, this would mean that if a lady and her husband had 6 fertilized eggs sitting in the freezer at an infertility center,  they used 2 and she got pregnant and had a child, they could never discard the other 4 in the freezer.  They would have to sit in the freezer in perpetuity.  Someone (kids, grandkids, great grandkids) would have to pay for the care of those embryos sitting in the freezer forever and ever.

I’d like to hear some of your comments on this because maybe I don’t understand what an embryo in the freezer actually is.  I know an embryo in the womb of a woman is a tiny person who has had the spark of life already activated.  But is an embryo sitting in -65 degree freezer really a “child” that demands protection?  After all, we couldn’t freeze a fetus at -65 for years and then expect it to grow again once we implanted it back into a uterus…could we?

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CNN — 

In a first-of-its-kind ruling, Alabama’s Supreme Court said frozen embryos are children and those who destroy them can be held liable for wrongful death – a decision that puts back into national focus the question of when life begins and one that reproductive rights advocates say could have a chilling effect on infertility treatments and the hundreds of Alabamians who seek them each year.

And, critics say, the ruling could soon have consequences nationally as other states could attempt to define embryos as people. Already, one religious group is using the Alabama ruling as precedent in a Florida abortion rights case.

“This is part of a long and strategic march towards entrenching this ideology of fetal personhood, that is at the heart of controlling pregnant people, their decisions and their birth outcomes,” Dana Sussman, the deputy executive director of legal advocacy group Pregnancy Justice, told CNN.

The Alabama ruling, which was released Friday, stems from two lawsuits filed by three sets of parents who underwent in vitro fertilization (IVF) procedures to have babies and then opted to have the remaining embryos frozen.

The parents allege in December 2020, a patient at the Mobile hospital where the frozen embryos were being stored walked into the fertility clinic through an “unsecured doorway,” and removed several embryos from the cryogenic nursery, the state’s Supreme Court ruling said. The patient’s hand was “freeze-burned” by the extremely low temperatures the embryos were stored in and the patient dropped them on the floor, killing them, according to the ruling.

The parents sued for wrongful death but a trial court dismissed their claims, finding the “cryopreserved, in vitro embryos involved in this case do not fit within the definition of a ‘person’ or ‘child,’” according to the ruling.

But in a stunning reversal last week, the state Supreme Court disagreed, noting “extrauterine children” – or, unborn children “located outside of a biological uterus at the time they are killed” – are children, and they are covered under the state’s Wrongful Death of a Minor law.

https://www.cnn.com/2024/02/20/us/alabama-embryo-law-ruling-supreme-court/index.html

4 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

It’s actually an ethical decision that you have to make when you go through IVF. There is counseling ahead of time to help with making that choice . An embryo is an 8-cell blastocyst. It is ready to be implanted, but only so many of these can be implanted at one time usually 2-3 depending on the age of the woman and how many cycles of IVF she has gone through. Those that aren’t implanted would be cryogenically stored to be thawed and implanted either in that women or adopted and implanted by another woman. A person going through this process would have to pay for this cryogenic storage. Again it boils down to an ethical decision. It is technically an embryo. Implanting it does not guarantee a baby, but the potential is there if it/they embed(s) in the uterine lining depending on how many are implanted.

February 22, 2024 at 9:59 PM  
Blogger Dennis said...

Thanks much for that explanation. I will continue to ponder this ruling as a Pro-Life person who strongly believes that what God has sparked in a womb is a child. But I’m not convinced that what man fabricated in a test tube is the same thing. There will be many ethical issues coming to the horizon as technology advances. What if men start creating beings that are humans but their DNA is mixed with some animals? Do they deserve protection? The list will be long but I think as Bible believers we are going to have to stay in front of these tech issues with some sound biblical reasoning. I do know the Bible says many times, “God closed her womb so she was barren.” Or “then God opened her womb and she had a child.” So I have to continue to think about this Alabama ruling using a biblical interpretation. Thanks again.

February 23, 2024 at 7:41 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

February 27, 2024
Ethics at the Edges of Life
Are you struggling with making a beginning of life or end of life medical decision? Bioethicist and Senior Fellow at The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity Dr. John Kilner will join us. He'll help us think through what he calls, "ethics at the edges of life." Don't miss the practical help for difficult issues on Chris Fabry Live.
This is a great segment on moody radio-about halfway through the 46 minute segment is a great perspective on embryos and IVF. This was on the radio today!

February 27, 2024 at 5:13 PM  
Blogger Dennis said...

Shoot! Of course I did t see your comment until today but guessing we could find it on a podcast someplace? Did you hear it and what did it it do to change or form your opinion?

February 29, 2024 at 7:38 AM  

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