Sally Has 2 Mommies and 1 Daddy. Rebecca Skloot.
by Skloot, Rebecca; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2004Article 68Human Relations. Publisher: Popular Science, 2003ISSN: 1522-3248;.Subject(s): Cell nuclei -- Transplantation | Fertilization in vitro -- Human | Genetic engineering -- Risk assessment | Human experimentation in medicine | Human reproduction | Human reproductive technology | Infertility -- Treatment | United States Food and Drug AdmDDC classification: 050 Summary: "With one in 11 couples in the United States infertile...desperation is widespread. Each year, thousands of women expose themselves and their future children to fertility treatments that were rushed from petri dishes to patients without regulation or human trials." (POPULAR SCIENCE) This article examines how fertility treatments have become a $2.7 billion industry with growing concern over unregulated assisted reproductive technology being used on patients desperate to have children.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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Books | High School - old - to delete | REF SIRS 2004 Human Relations Article 68 (Browse shelf) | Available |
Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2004.
Originally Published: Sally Has 2 Mommies and 1 Daddy, March 2003; pp. 72+.
"With one in 11 couples in the United States infertile...desperation is widespread. Each year, thousands of women expose themselves and their future children to fertility treatments that were rushed from petri dishes to patients without regulation or human trials." (POPULAR SCIENCE) This article examines how fertility treatments have become a $2.7 billion industry with growing concern over unregulated assisted reproductive technology being used on patients desperate to have children.
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