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Medical and health sciences
- Gynaecology
- Philosophy of medicine
Families with parents of Advanced Parental Age (APA) are becoming more and more
common; a trend that has raised serious concerns for several reasons. APA is typically
advised against as it is assumed that older parents will not be able to fulfil their
parental duties. Older parenthood is associated with medical complications for the
mother and for the child and an increase in the use of medical assistance to conceive.
The debate on APA has focussed on a number of different topics including reproductive
autonomy, parental rights and responsibilities, (discrimination on the basis of) gender
and age, justice, and the welfare of the child. However, key principles, such as
principle of reproductive autonomy (the right of a person to decide for her or himself
when, how, etc. (s)he plans to reproduce) and the welfare of the child (which is the
main argument used to restrict parental autonomy in reproduction) will need to be
balanced against other values and must be understood in a setting of normative ideas.
While more and more data are gathered on factors that contribute to the increase in
parental age at first birth, little research is done on how society reacts (and should
react) to this evolution and how citizens think about it. Our research aims to increase
insight into how and why people decide to have children later in life and to what extent
moral views and principles play a role in this decision and on how and why
professionals make treatment decisions. Given the fact that every society has an
elaborate set of rules and theories on family building and reproduction, it is important
to explore whether personal views of citizens match this set and if not, in which
direction changes should be made.
The overall goal of the project is to create a strong and coherent normative framework
about responsible family building at an advanced age: >40 years old for at least one of
the parents. This normative framework, that is empirically informed, will help to design
recommendations for clinical practice and policy making. To examine how age is used
as a factor in decisions and moral reasoning about reproduction in two contexts:
natural conception and reproductive medicine, we will critically analyse the validity
and acceptability of widely accepted ethical principles and guidelines as well as the
stakeholders’convictions. The study will examine what defines a ‘ood’parent, which
characteristics describe such a ‘ood’parent; and what are the minimal standards for
parental competence. Special attention will be given to questions of justice and the
presence of double moral standards in restrictions on women’ and men’ possibilities
to procreate at an older age.
This complementary study includes 1) an explorative study of the normative literature
to scrutinize the principles, arguments and background theories forwarded and
available in the academic and societal discussions on APA; 2) a critical analysis of
existing empirical evidence delineating the extent to which parental age is a factor in
relevant concerns resulting in arguments for and against APA in the two contexts; 3) a
mapping of the regulatory framework on APA in Belgium and Switzerland to
underscore how the law, regulations and guidelines shape the practice; 4) a qualitative
interview study capturing the experiences of stakeholders and their moral views
concerning responsible parenthood in relation to APA; and 5) an integration of the
empirical findings and the normative-theoretical knowledge in a new and coherent
normative framework about responsible family building at APA. Based on our
combined expertise and disciplinary backgrounds and with the support of the partners
of the research project, we will cover a multi-faceted research question in a way that
creates new pathways of impact. The project will result in novel findings and important
scientific outputs for the fields of reproductive medicine and biomedical ethics.