Family history MAY be a benefit, but we cannot rely on history alone to determine who we are and how we should live our lives.
Family history MAY be a benefit
I did not know that I had PKD when I had my kids as I was adopted and did not have a medical history on my parents.But some people still have kids knowing that they each have a 50% of having the disease. I was thinking that if I knew about the PKD would I still have had kids? I honestly don't know. Someone told me once that if we do not have kids because of a history of diabetics, heart problems, cancer, obesity and other illnesses that may be heridiraty (spelling sorry) no one would be having kids.What is your take on this?
QuoteFamily history MAY be a benefit, but we cannot rely on history alone to determine who we are and how we should live our lives. There is a huge difference between having a kid when your family has a history of early heart disease, cancer, etc. and having one when you know there is a 50% chance of any offspring having a specific disease like PKD or Huntingtons.That being said, I offer no opinion or judgement on parents making that choice.QuoteFamily history MAY be a benefitThere is no "may" when you are dealing with a 50/50 chance of inheriting the PKD or Huntington's gene. Family history is a very strong predictor, and an absolute predictor you are taking a very big risk.
Quote from: Des on August 11, 2009, 02:16:38 AMI did not know that I had PKD when I had my kids as I was adopted and did not have a medical history on my parents.But some people still have kids knowing that they each have a 50% of having the disease. I was thinking that if I knew about the PKD would I still have had kids? I honestly don't know. Someone told me once that if we do not have kids because of a history of diabetics, heart problems, cancer, obesity and other illnesses that may be heridiraty (spelling sorry) no one would be having kids.What is your take on this?Hello Del,My kidneys first failed in 1971 and afterwards they recovered a little of their function again without me needing any dialysis until 18 months ago ...... Early on I was told by a Professor of medicine that it would not be advisable for me to have any children because he said that if people in kidney-failure have children, these children are either born with severe health-defects, or these children develop severe health-problems/defects later in life... Having been warned about these terrible dangers at a very young age, I could never justify in my mind the idea of having any children and after thinking it over thoroughly, I have never ever allowed myself to entertain this idea ... ... and after discussing it with my husband - when we were getting serious about our future together - we both agreed and were contend with the idea of not to have children ...... We both have not regretted our decision because over the years we have met too many kidney-patients with health-problem-children... and it hurt very much and was very painful to witness their suffering ...... I must also mention that for me it was a very difficult and hard decision, because I really adore children and I get on with them extremely well ...Best wishes from Kristina.
50% is half. For the sake of arguement say you have TWO children, one may be fine, the other may have the trait. But this is not always true. BOTH may have the trait. Then again, BOTH may be fine.
Who are WE to dictate how another should live their life? As long as their life is not negatively affecting another being.
Like I said Charlie, I am not proferring an opinion on whether someone should or shouldn't have a child. All I am saying is that a 50% chance has to be clearly understood logically and rationally.
. My kid (came with the marriage) is a donor kid, and that has not interfered with my family relationships at all. In fact, the fact that she was "bred" (vial selected from a catalog) may be why she turned out smart enough to be able to invite me to her Harvard graduation earlier this week. I do not feel in the slightest bit deprived or less fulfilled because my family came from a non-traditional mechanism.
... Does that not indicate a frightening development of "human selection" ?
P.S. This medical Professor pointed out to me that it is completely irrelevant whether or not the kidney-disease we suffer from (in my case: Chronic Proliferative Glomerulonephritis) is inheritable or not... or whether it involves the male or the female who is suffering from a kidney-disease...Why? In his answer he pointed out, that our kidneys are extremely vital organs in our body and if they are "faulty" because of a kidney disease etc., this medical faultiness - as a result - "promotes" the fact that a child is to be depleted of vital "ingredients" from the very start after the "creation" ... ... and ... he also pointed out that because of this, there is unfortunately no "pretty" medical outcome at all ...Kristina.
(I can't help asking - why isn't there much demand for redheads?)
Quote(I can't help asking - why isn't there much demand for redheads?)I agree. I used to have auburnish hair (it's now drab brown/grey as I age) and I always wanted to be a real red head. I even used eyebrow pencil as a kid to pencil on freckles (more than I already had). So it seems strange to me that they are discriminated against. Does red headedness come with some payload of other problems? Or is it merely an aesthetic issue? I know it's a recessive trait. I come from a Russian Jewish background and my whole family except for me has/had black hair. And there I was as a strawberry blond kid later darkening to red-ish. I learned that there is a "thing" that happens in that ethnic group where black-haired men can have red beards and there is the occasional red headed child. Genes are funny that way.
Quote from: kristina on May 30, 2016, 09:48:37 AM... Does that not indicate a frightening development of "human selection" ?Perhaps, but that is the nature of sperm banking. The buyer gets the medical and intellectual history of the donor.An interesting eugenic example of what happens with sperm nbanking is redheads - some banks do not buy sperm from redheaded donors since there is little demand for that product.Interesting ethical questions. Few, if any, would argue that it is reasonable for sperm buyers to reject product like sperm that bears a 50% change of Huntingtons (makes PKD look like a common cold), but what about selecting for intelligence; height; hair color; etc.? Should a buyer be obligated to select sperm from a population not screened for intelligence, just to give stupid sperm equal opportunity? What about selecting sperm to match the race of the recipient?As to "evils" - I rank birthing a kid with PKD or Huntingtons as more evil that selecting sperm out of a catalog to get a smart, healthy kid.For those with PKD the choice is tri-state, not binary. It's don't have kids; have kids the natural way; or find some alternative way to build a family dynasty.
Quote from: kristina on May 30, 2016, 06:41:42 AMP.S. This medical Professor pointed out to me that it is completely irrelevant whether or not the kidney-disease we suffer from (in my case: Chronic Proliferative Glomerulonephritis) is inheritable or not... or whether it involves the male or the female who is suffering from a kidney-disease...Why? In his answer he pointed out, that our kidneys are extremely vital organs in our body and if they are "faulty" because of a kidney disease etc., this medical faultiness - as a result - "promotes" the fact that a child is to be depleted of vital "ingredients" from the very start after the "creation" ... ... and ... he also pointed out that because of this, there is unfortunately no "pretty" medical outcome at all ...Kristina. I question this statement, for the simple fact that there have been many kidney patients who have been able to father/carry in pregnancy babies that come out to be healthy children and on up to healthy adults. Blanket statements are just that - blanket statements. Nothing is all true in any situation when it comes to health.KarenInWA
Quote from: Simon Dog on May 30, 2016, 04:22:46 PMQuote from: kristina on May 30, 2016, 09:48:37 AM... Does that not indicate a frightening development of "human selection" ?Perhaps, but that is the nature of sperm banking. The buyer gets the medical and intellectual history of the donor.An interesting eugenic example of what happens with sperm nbanking is redheads - some banks do not buy sperm from redheaded donors since there is little demand for that product.Interesting ethical questions. Few, if any, would argue that it is reasonable for sperm buyers to reject product like sperm that bears a 50% change of Huntingtons (makes PKD look like a common cold), but what about selecting for intelligence; height; hair color; etc.? Should a buyer be obligated to select sperm from a population not screened for intelligence, just to give stupid sperm equal opportunity? What about selecting sperm to match the race of the recipient?As to "evils" - I rank birthing a kid with PKD or Huntingtons as more evil that selecting sperm out of a catalog to get a smart, healthy kid.For those with PKD the choice is tri-state, not binary. It's don't have kids; have kids the natural way; or find some alternative way to build a family dynasty.Hello Simon, ...The reason for my above comment is based on historical events, where a frightening, terrifying development of "human selection" took place, based on the idea of "Lebensborn e.V." (literally: "Fount of Life") which was an SS-initiated, state-supported, registered association with the goal of raising the birth rate of very healthy & clever children of persons classified as "racially pure, very healthy and clever", all based on Nazi racial hygiene and Nazi health ideology ... "Fount of Life" encouraged anonymous births by unmarried healthy women and mediated adoption of these children from 1935 - 1945 and about 60% of the mothers were unmarried and they were all medically checked-up and medically "cleared", before being "selected" to "multiplie", as Geoffrey Chaucer would have put it ...Kristina.
Quote from: kristina on June 01, 2016, 02:39:50 AMQuote from: Simon Dog on May 30, 2016, 04:22:46 PMQuote from: kristina on May 30, 2016, 09:48:37 AM... Does that not indicate a frightening development of "human selection" ?Perhaps, but that is the nature of sperm banking. The buyer gets the medical and intellectual history of the donor.An interesting eugenic example of what happens with sperm nbanking is redheads - some banks do not buy sperm from redheaded donors since there is little demand for that product.Interesting ethical questions. Few, if any, would argue that it is reasonable for sperm buyers to reject product like sperm that bears a 50% change of Huntingtons (makes PKD look like a common cold), but what about selecting for intelligence; height; hair color; etc.? Should a buyer be obligated to select sperm from a population not screened for intelligence, just to give stupid sperm equal opportunity? What about selecting sperm to match the race of the recipient?As to "evils" - I rank birthing a kid with PKD or Huntingtons as more evil that selecting sperm out of a catalog to get a smart, healthy kid.For those with PKD the choice is tri-state, not binary. It's don't have kids; have kids the natural way; or find some alternative way to build a family dynasty.Hello Simon, ...The reason for my above comment is based on historical events, where a frightening, terrifying development of "human selection" took place, based on the idea of "Lebensborn e.V." (literally: "Fount of Life") which was an SS-initiated, state-supported, registered association with the goal of raising the birth rate of very healthy & clever children of persons classified as "racially pure, very healthy and clever", all based on Nazi racial hygiene and Nazi health ideology ... "Fount of Life" encouraged anonymous births by unmarried healthy women and mediated adoption of these children from 1935 - 1945 and about 60% of the mothers were unmarried and they were all medically checked-up and medically "cleared", before being "selected" to "multiplie", as Geoffrey Chaucer would have put it ...Kristina.Kristina, I don't think it is fair to lump the enormity of the abuses of the Nazi regime on someone who is trying their best to find a solution within existing ethical and lawful medical practices. The uncomfortable truth is that the Nazi regime actually made some new medical discoveries which have benefited mankind greatly since then (this is something one hears from time to time). Bringing everything back to what the Nazis once did generally isn't very helpful.
Kristina, I don't think it is fair to lump the enormity of the abuses of the Nazi regime on someone who is trying their best to find a solution within existing ethical and lawful medical practices. The uncomfortable truth is that the Nazi regime actually made some new medical discoveries which have benefited mankind greatly since then (this is something one hears from time to time). Bringing everything back to what the Nazis once did generally isn't very helpful.