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Ethical and Legal Aspects of Sperm Retrieval after Death or Persistent Vegetative State
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2021
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Several methods have been reported for extracting sperm from a man after he dies or enters a persistent vegetative state (PVS). Although such sperm retrieval could be performed for nonprocreative purposes, such as research, in this paper I focus on cases involving procreative intent. Since 1980, more than ninety cases have occurred in which family members requested sperm retrieval from patients who died or were irreversibly unconscious, with the intent that a wife, girlfriend, or other woman would be inseminated. Recently, the first report of pregnancy and birth following postmortem sperm retrieval appeared in the media.
In these cases, death or PVS typically is caused by anoxic injuries, trauma, or rapidly progressing infections.
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- Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 1999
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