What if technology could free you from the discomfort of pregnancy and the pain of child birth?
What if your womb becomes obsolete?
As many as one in 5,000 women are born without a womb and others, for example some cancer sufferers, must have theirs removed.
Next year, the first ever womb transplants will take place in the UK as part of a clinical trial involving 10 women.
If successful, doctors responsible for the trial believe that these women (who were previously infertile) will be able to bear children.
Indeed, a baby boy was already born from a similar trial in Sweden last year.
As with all new reproductive technologies, there are ethical considerations related to how such technologies will be administered. Who will be given the right to access them? And what might it mean for gay men and trans women? Who will be able to afford to access them? And what are the broader implications of how an advancement like this will affect social conditions?
In a recent piece in the Guardian, journalist Eleanor Robertson jumps forward in time to a point where scientists won’t just be transplanting wombs, they may actually be creating them — raising foetuses in artificial wombs outside women’s bodies in a process known a ectogenesis.
Robertson asks: “What would it mean for the uterus – and therefore, the biological necessity of women’s reproductive labour – if it were to become obsolete?”
Top Comments
From a totally logistical point of view, this would be fraught with issues - where would these artificial wombs be kept during gestation? A warehouse type facility? What if it burned down? What if someone burned it down, would they be charged with murder, or just property damage? Would the parents have to pay extra for insurance? So many interesting questions! I personally think it is much further than a couple of decades away, but still an interesting discussion.
Also, as an aside, what is with this obsession of having the most 'pain free' pregnancy/birth possible?! Parenting is hard and painful, even after the baby is born, when did people become so precious!
What if they got switched? Or stolen? Or there was an electrical blackout? Or the cost? Or who would let their babies be the first experiments, would you risk the loss or damage of your child?
"It seems unlikely that they won't be" comfortable using artificial wombs? And from where can you draw such an obscene conclusion? This will never be reality, the biological imperative for a woman to carry her own child is too strong and its very likely to be made illegal everywhere. Science fiction.
What about adopted children? The mother does not carry them.
No, but the children still have the human experience of being carried within another human and then delivered. While not an adoptive mother myself, I will hazard a guess and say I am sure that many adoptive mothers would have loved to have had the experience of pregnancy and delivery. And I have heard of adoptive mothers going to great lengths and much struggle to breastfeed adopted infants. The "biological imperative" as guest mentioned, is often overwhelming.