The Guardian view on gene-edited humans: darker uses alongside medical ones
6 hours ago
- #Public Opinion on CRISPR
- #Germline Editing Regulation
- #Gene-Editing Ethics
- CRISPR-Cas9 gene-editing raises urgent ethical questions about designer babies, with global legal prohibitions against human germline editing.
- Recent studies using more precise base-editing on human embryos (legal if destroyed within 14 days) advance research, with scientists viewing regulated use for eradicating hereditary diseases as inevitable, hinging on safety concerns.
- Safety, rather than broader ethics, underpins most laws; influential bodies like the Nuffield Council and US National Academies don't deem germline editing inherently unethical, pushing debates toward fundamental questions about its use and regulation.
- Public opinion in the UK, Spain, and the Netherlands shows majority support for gene editing to correct life-threatening conditions and plurality support for manageable ones, reflecting increased trust in science and willingness to alter human biology.
- Germline editing shouldn't be a foregone conclusion; it should be restricted initially to untreatable genetic conditions if proven safe, as the leap from medical treatment to designer traits is short, with existing IVF collaborations highlighting risks of misuse.
- While a ban remains justified on safety grounds, that argument may weaken, necessitating broader conversations about future regulations and ethical limits to prevent darker uses like on-demand genetic designs.