Description du projet
L’éthique à l’ère des progrès technologiques: la médecine procréative féminine dans le collimateur
La médecine de la reproduction couvre tous les aspects de procréation humaine, de la fécondation à la naissance, et s’attache à résoudre les problèmes de conception naturelle par le biais de traitements médicalement assistés. En cette ère de progrès technologiques rapides, l’objectif principal du projet ERIN, financé par l’UE, est d’apporter aux cliniques des innovations plus responsables sur le plan éthique dans le cadre de pratiques telles que la préservation de la fertilité chez les femmes à risque et l’analyse génétique de l’embryon. Les partenaires du projet aborderont tous les types de préoccupations, risques et vulnérabilités éthiques possibles en lien avec les nouvelles solutions en matière de reproduction, préparant ainsi le terrain pour des pratiques déontologiquement plus responsables. En outre, ils s’attacheront à garantir l’égalité de l’accès à la médecine de la reproduction pour toutes les femmes vulnérables qui espèrent enfanter.
Objectif
ERIN project was initiated to spread the academic excellence to University of Tartu (UT) in Estonia as representative of the Widening country, by enhancing networking activities with internationally-leading counterparts, Karolinska Institute (Sweden) and Maastricht University Medical Centre (The Netherlands).
The consortium increases the scientific, innovation and clinical superbness of UT and its partners, by raising the R&I profiles, and the proficiency to identify, explore and resolve the ethical challenges in female reproductive medicine. We deal with the most intimate aspects of human life, by medically assisting conception, by carrying out a genetic analysis of an embryo or fetus to have a healthy baby, and by preserving fertility in women whose fertility is at risk. In the era of rapidly progressing technologies, novel solutions emerge fasten than the conclusive clinical evidence is collected and ethical challenges are addressed. Reproductive medicine is also often unsatisfactorily publicly supported, creating an inequality in access for the most vulnerable category of the patients, women waiting for childbirth.
This is why reproductive medicine, covering human life from fertilization till birth, requires special attention to tackle all possible ethical concerns, risks and vulnerabilities, and involving all stakeholders, from individual patients to broad community. By addressing these challenges, we aim to bring more ethically responsible innovations into clinic that do not harm the interests of the various stakeholders, are evidence-based, cost-effective and therefore could be implemented in a sustainable way to ensure that these novel solutions become widely accessible.
As an outcome, ERIN improves the responsible innovation practices, establish ethical system in R&I, expands knowledge and innovation capacity of the UT, and improves proficiency of all partners to facilitate the equity of access to research advances in reproductive medicine.
Champ scientifique
Mots‑clés
Programme(s)
- H2020-EU.4.b. - Twinning of research institutions Main Programme
Thème(s)
Régime de financement
CSA - Coordination and support actionCoordinateur
51005 Tartu
Estonie