Submission to the Health Select Committee on the Human Assisted Reproductive
Technology ("HART") Bill SOP No. 80
July 2003
Introduction
Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the 29 April 2003 Supplementary
Order Paper ("SOP") No. 80. The Bioethics Council ("the Council")
supports the move to regulate, in consultation with the public, the issues
surrounding human assisted reproductive technology, and supports the progression
of the 1996 HART Bill. The Council suggests in this submission a range
of modifications to the SOP that aim to incorporate the key developments
in thinking around biotechnology that have occurred since the introduction
of the original HART Bill.
General Points
Since the introduction of the HART Bill in 1996, the Royal Commission
on Genetic Modification (RCGM) reported in July 2001, the New Zealand
Biotechnology Strategy ("the Strategy") was released in May 2003, and
the Bioethics Council has been established. Some of the key principles
and themes running through the RCGM report and the Strategy are:
- The interface between science and society, and the need for an integrated
whole-of-government approach to biotechnology.
- The need for futurewatch, as technologies develop.
- The importance of public involvement and consultation relating to
biotechnology developments, research, uses and regulation.
- The need to manage risks, and to safeguard the people and the environment.
- The need to address cultural, ethical and spiritual issues and concerns.
It is the view of the Council that the HART Bill SOP has yet to adequately
incorporate some of the developments in thinking relating to biotechnology
that have occurred since the RCGM, as dotpointed above. These are explored
in each Part of the Bill, below.
In addition, it is the view of the Council that the SOP and the proposed
Ministerial Advisory Committee have a narrow focus revolving around reproductive
technology. This is one component of human biotechnology that is, in turn,
a part of the broader cross-sectoral biotechnology arena. The SOP in its
current form will not future-proof for all health biotechnologies. Xenotransplantation
and the use of drugs and other medical devices, for example, may become
more controversial in the future because of developments in neurology
and nanotechnology. The SOP raises a wider public policy question around
the structures that might need to be established to regulate not only
reproductive technologies but also other biotechnologies in the human
area that may have cultural, ethical and spiritual dimensions.
The HART Bill SOP falls within the ambit of the Council's Terms of Reference
which are to advise, provide guidelines, and promote dialogue on the cultural,
ethical and spiritual issues associated with biotechnology.
Part 1AA: Preliminary Provisions
Clause 4: Principles
(a) The principle as drafted in the SOP states that the health and
wellbeing of children born as a result of the performance of an assisted
reproductive procedure should be paramount in all decisions about that
procedure.
The Council suggests that this principle be modified to recognise that
the adults involved in any relevant procedure also have rights as well
as obligations. At the very least, the word paramount could be replaced
with the word priority. More comprehensively, the principle could be redrafted
to express that assisted reproductive procedures and decisions about
those procedures should affirm the dignity of all human beings, with the
health and wellbeing of children born as a result of these procedures
regarded as having priority.
Neither suggested modification would be inconsistent with the Status
of Children Amendment Act 1987 in relation to the status of persons conceived
as a result of certain medical procedures.
(b) The principle as drafted is that human health, safety, and dignity
should be preserved and promoted.
The Council suggests that the wording human health and safety should
be safeguarded, and dignity preserved and promoted may better reflect
the intention of this principle. Furthermore, the aim to safeguard human
health and safety can help to "futureproof" the principle, as new technologies
emerge over time.
The word dignity is not currently defined or interpreted in
section 5 of the SOP. The Council recommends that this word be defined
for the purposes of this Bill.
(c) This principle asserts that no assisted reproductive procedure should
be performed on an individual and no human reproductive research should
be conducted on an individual unless the individual has been given an
opportunity to make an informed choice to submit or to refuse to submit
to the procedure or the research.
The Council suggests rewording this principle to read no assisted
reproductive procedure should be performed without informed consent.
This approach would remove the language of "submitting".
(d) As drafted, the principle states that donor offspring should
be made aware of their genetic origins and be able to access information
about those origins.
The Council suggests replacing the prescriptive approach indicated by
the words should be made aware of, with the words are entitled
to be made aware of.
(e) The principle states that the needs, values, and beliefs of Maori
should be considered and treated with respect.
The Council recommends that this principle be reworded to read the needs
of Maori be accommodated, and their values and beliefs treated with respect.
This approach would strengthen the principle, and would be consistent
with the terms of reference of the Bioethics Council, approved by the
Government late in 2002; in particular, its responsibility to consult
and engage with Maori in a manner that specifically provides for their
needs. In practical terms, this approach would ensure that service delivery
and research better accommodate the needs of Maori participants and more
appropriately involve Maori.
(f) This principle states that the different ethical, spiritual,
and cultural perspectives in society should be considered and treated
with respect.
This principle implicitly incorporates public dialogue and participation.
As such, it relates to section 37 of the SOP - the requirement to consult.
As it is currently drafted, however, the SOP does not explicitly link
public dialogue and consultation with consideration of different perspectives.
The Council recommends that this principle be reworded to explicitly make
that link, in order to establish the significance of public consultation
in the area of human assisted reproductive technology.
Part 1: Prohibited and Regulated Activities - Subpart 1 Prohibited Actions
Clause 7(1): Prohibited Actions
This section refers to Schedule 1 of the SOP that includes the list of
prohibited actions relating to human assisted reproductive technology.
The Council supports the list in Schedule 1.
While the SOP bans hybrid embryos for reproductive purposes, it does
not explicitly ban their creation for research purposes. On the other
hand, neither does it explicitly enable diagnostic tests that involve
animal eggs and human sperm, as did the second schedule of the original
HART Bill. However, the Council notes that the Ministerial Advisory Committee
("MAC" or the "Committee") could have jurisdiction over such tests. Section
36 indicates that the Committee will provide advice on the creation and
use of hybrid embryos for non-reproductive purposes. The Council suggests
that the MAC's deliberations include consideration of whether such tests
should be accepted procedures.
Clause 7(3): Prohibited Actions
This section refers to ...that gamete, embryo, foetus, or thing.
The Council recommends replacing the word thing with the word
being, as it is used in section 7(2).
Clause 10(2): Duty to Stop Development of Embryos outside Human Body
While explicit about the importation or exportation or further development
of embryos outside the human body once they are fourteen days old or more,
the SOP is silent on such treatment within the first fourteen days. The
Council suggests explicit rather than implicit guidance in the SOP relating
to those first fourteen days.
The SOP is also silent on importation and exportation of genetically
modified embryos. The New Organism and Other Matters ("NOOM") Bill that
amends the Hazardous Substances and New Organisms ("HSNO") Act 1996 deals
with imported GM gametes, but explicitly excludes human embryos. If this
is the intention of the NOOM Bill, the Council perceives this as a gap
in legislation that could be addressed through the HART Bill SOP.
Clause 11: Commercial Supply of Embryos or Human Gametes Prohibited
The Council notes the inclusion of commercialisation in the SOP, and
the associated encouragement of public debate about the issue. This debate
is part of a wider, and unresolved, tension between New Zealand's respect
for individual rights and the New Zealand philanthropic approach to the
donation of blood and body parts.
This section of the SOP raises questions for New Zealand society is unlikely
to be addressed within the timeframe for consultation on the SOP. As such,
the Council suggests that prohibition of commercial supply of embryos
or human gametes versus its tolerance (where harm does not occur) be removed
from section 11 and included in section 36(1): the list of matters on
which MAC is required to consult and advise.
Clause 12: Status of Surrogacy Arrangements and Prohibition of Commercial
Surrogacy Arrangements
The Council recommends that section 12 be treated in the same way as
the Council's recommendation for section 11. There has not been sufficient
time to elicit the views of the public on commercial surrogacy. The MAC
could consult with the public and advise the Minister of Health on the
range of views on this matter and where, on balance, the weight of views
lie.
Part 1: Prohibited and Regulated Activities - Subpart 2 Activities Requiring
Approval of Ethics Committee
The Council supports the formal recognition in legislation of the role
of ethics committees in relation to human assisted reproductive technology,
and supports the function as outlined in section 25(1)(c) of ethics committee/advisory
committee liaison.
Part 1: Prohibited and Regulated Activities - Subpart 3 Advisory Committee
General Comments
The Council is concerned that the establishment of the MAC has the potential
to further fragment the roles of existing ethics Committees, and diminish
their efficiency and effectiveness. Some roles may inefficiently overlap.
One example of this relates to public dialogue about biotechnology. The
Bioethics Council is currently resourced to facilitate consultation. For
the MAC to also successfully achieve its regulatory requirements, it may
need to take a significant role in facilitating public dialogue and be
resourced to do so. Funding two organisations to undertake similar roles
might be more costly than funding one to do a wider range of roles.
The SOP also needs to be tied in with the Government's whole of government
approach to biotechnology. As stated in the SOP, the MAC will exclusively
focus on reproductive technology. The New Zealand Biotechnology Strategy,
however, reinforces the need for a whole-of-government approach to biotechnology,
including human biotechnology and the more narrowly defined reproductive
technologies.
We note further that as technologies progress, boundaries between their
types and impacts will blur, and not fit neatly into the health or non-health
categories. Examples of this include xenotransplantation (involving animal
ethics and human bioethics), and the implications of environmental biotechnology
for humans. In addition, the public tends not to differentiate between
human and other biotechnologies, and to expect consistency of approaches
across technologies.
Thus the Council suggests that reproductive biotechnologies need to be
considered and responded to as part of the Government's key health strategies,
and within its whole of government approach to biotechnology. The approach
to reproductive technologies also needs to enable "futurewatch" in relation
to emerging technologies and their safety and risks for humans (Principle
(b) refers). In relation to this, the Council notes that the areas of
technology covered by the HART Bill SOP are within the scope of the Council's
Terms of Reference, which require futurewatch and consideration of the
cultural, ethical and spiritual issues associated with biotechnology.
Clause 33: Appointment of Members
The Council considers that the section on the composition of the MAC
and the nomination of its members could be tightened to include:
- Public nominations for some or all of the members.
- A minimum size for the Committee.
- A clearer definition of the term layperson.
- A requirement for the chair of the Committee to be a layperson, in
order to be consistent with similarly constituted committees.
Clause 34: Functions of Advisory Committee
The functions of the MAC will involve significant liaison with, and support
from, the Bioethics Council and relevant ethics committees. The Bioethics
Council will be a key provider of issue-based advice and a conduit to
community consultation (refer also to section 37 below). This picks up
the issue of the potential for inefficiencies and ineffectiveness to result
from the establishment of a further committee.
Structural approaches that might help avoid fragmentation and inefficiency
could include:
- Adequate resourcing of the MAC so that it can parallel the
work of, and work alongside, the Bioethics Council in relation to human
technologies, including adequate public consultation.
- Merging of the roles of the MAC and the National Ethics Advisory
Committee, and resourcing it appropriately.
- Combination of the roles and resources of the MAC into the
Bioethics Council to:
- Address the need for a whole-of-government approach (health,
research, environmental, agricultural).
- Ensure public involvement.
In this option, the Bioethics Council would need to be resourced with
at least one additional member (and, realistically, probably more) who
has human reproductive technology expertise, together with an additional
person on the secretariat.
Clause 36: Advisory Committee Must Provide Specific Advice
The Council recommends that section 36(1)(b)(iii) explicitly include
the words including sex selection after the words embryo selection, in
recognition that sex selection versus sex neutrality may become an issue
for public debate within New Zealand, as our population becomes more ethnically
diverse.
Clause 37: Requirement to Consult
Public consultation as currently drafted in this section of the SOP is
at the discretion of the MAC. It is the Council's view that issues relating
to human assisted reproductive technology are issues for general New Zealand
public involvement and debate. The Council strongly recommends that requirements
for public dialogue, consultation and submission either be included as
a mandatory part of the MAC's Terms of Reference, or that other structural
approaches be progressed (as outlined under the Council's response to
section 34 above) that will also ensure such public involvement.
Part 4: Information about Donors of Donated Cells and Donor Offspring
This section of the SOP requires only a subset of information to be provided
to the Registrar General. The Council recommends that the remaining information
kept by providers be audited and monitored, and that the responsibility
for such auditing and monitoring be that of the Ministry of Health, as
part of its role of administering the legislation.
Conclusion
In conclusion, the Council supports the move to progress the HART Bill,
and is pleased to have the opportunity to comment on the Bill's SOP.
In general, the SOP does not appear to have incorporated the developments
in biotechnology that have occurred since 1996, when the Bill was first
introduced. Specifically, such developments relate to:
- The need for a whole-of-government approach.
- The blurring of boundaries between technologies.
- The need to futurewatch for emerging technologies.
The current SOP focus on reproductive technologies is narrow, considering
its context within human biotechnologies generally and the broader cross-sectoral
biotechnology arena. The SOP does not futureproof against all health biotechnologies,
and raises questions about the structures that might need to be established
to regulate not only reproductive technologies but also other biotechnologies
in the human area that may have cultural, ethical and spiritual dimensions.
Human assisted reproductive technology issues will require ongoing public
debate. As such, either the MAC's terms of reference needs to be broadened
to explicitly require public dialogue, consultation and submission, or
other structural Committee options should be considered.
The proposed establishment of the MAC will contribute to the proliferation
of Committees and Councils. This proliferation has the potential to fragment
the roles of existing ethics Committees, and diminish their efficiency
and effectiveness, unless they co-operate and work together.
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