JOURNAL OF REPRODUCTIVE AND INFANT PSYCHOLOGY, vol. 14, n° 1, 1996, pages 57-68, réf. 1p., ISSN 0264-6838, GBR
Department of Social Work. University of Canterbury. Private Bag 4800. Christchurch. NZL
A committee appointed by the New Zealand Government to inquire into developments in assisted human reproduction recommended in their 1994 report that all offspring born following the donation of embryos or gametes should have access to identifying donor information.
This paper presents the Committee's conclusions, along with a description of current attitudes and practices in New Zealand.
Sweden and New Zealand have, until recently, been the only two countries in the world that have adopted the'openness'approach.
Some brief comparisons are made between the approaches followed in these two countries.
Mots-clés BDSP : Nouvelle Zélande, Océanie, Fécondation artificielle, Identification, Homme, Accès information, SANTE PUBLIQUE
Mots-clés Pascal : Nouvelle Zélande, Océanie, Accès information, Procréation assistée, Identification, Donneur, Gamète, Santé publique, Homme
Mots-clés Pascal anglais : New Zealand, Oceania, Information access, Assisted procreation, Identification, Donor, Gamete, Human
Notice produite par :
Inist-CNRS - Institut de l'Information Scientifique et Technique
Cote : 96-0178481
Code Inist : 002A26N02. Création : 199608.