Sex Selection
NEWS
In April 2016, the Canadian Medical Association Journal published two related studies. One study was on (PDF 鈥 281 KB) at birth after induced abortion in Ontario and the other study was on among Canadian- and Indian-born mothers who gave birth in Canada. These studies showed a higher than expected ratio of male to female infants among the third children of Indian-born Canadian women, particularly when these women already had two daughters. The studies also showed a link between induced abortions and the sex ratio among infants born to Indian-born Canadian women. Thereby, these studies suggested that sex selection may be occurring in this population.
In a CBC radio , Alana Cattapan noted that prenatal sex selection followed by elective termination, and embryo sex selection involving preimplantation genetic diagnosis or other technologies raise different ethical issues and call for different policy approaches. In Canada, embryo sex selection is prohibited by law (see below), except in cases of sex-linked disorder or disease. Cattapan argued against introducing a legal prohibition on sex-selective abortion in Canada saying that women should not be interrogated about their reason(s) for requesting an abortion.
OVERVIEW
Issues of sex selection arise in two distinct contexts of human reproduction: testing of the fetus in an established pregnancy, and embryo selection/creation as part of the process of in vitro fertilization to initiate a pregnancy.
While the Society for Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada has policies against prenatal testing for the sole purpose of identifying the (PDF 鈥 42.5 KB), there is no law in Canada to prevent sex-selective abortion. In a 2012 (PDF 鈥 50.5 KB) in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, then-editor Rajendra Kale suggested introducing restrictions on disclosure of the fetus鈥 sex until the last trimester, when abortion is no longer available. He argued that a policy only allowing for disclosure of sex after 30 weeks of pregnancy was a reasonable ethical compromise to prevent sex selection by abortion. As , however, 鈥淸r]estricting disclosure might work to reduce the number of women seeking abortions following the identification of fetal sex, but it will do little to make those pregnancies wanted.鈥
As for embryo sex selection, there are different assisted reproductive technologies that can be used. These include or in vitro fertilization with . Performing a procedure to increase the chances of creating an embryo of a specific sex or choosing an embryo for transfer on the basis of sex is illegal in Canada (), 鈥渆xcept to prevent, diagnose or treat a sex-linked disorder or disease.鈥 The law, however, does not stop Canadians from accessing such procedures outside of Canada. In 2012, the newspaper Indo-Canadian Voice (based near Vancouver, B.C.) published an for sex selection using preimplantation genetic diagnosis at a fertility clinic near Seattle.
From an ethics perspective it is important to recognize that often when we speak of sex selection in the context of human reproduction . And, in a Canadian context, it is also important to recognize that 鈥榮ex selection鈥 and the privileging of gender is ongoing, and reaches well-beyond the Indo-Canadian community. Recognizing the above, it is important to critically examine how 鈥榮ex selection鈥 reinforces problematic assumptions about the binary and traditional mapping of gender and sex.
Finally, it is worth noting that 鈥榮ex selection鈥 is but one extreme of a continuum of sex discrimination practices prevalent throughout Canadian society that undergird injustices rooted in resulting forms of male privilege.
Last updated: June 2016