Abstract: This commentary explores a complex issue in modern medicine, focusing on the experience of people like Lucas Warren, the first Gerber Baby with Down syndrome, along with the children of the authors in this issue of Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics ( NIB ). The commentary highlights a paradox: medical advancements have greatly improved opportunities for well-being and quality of life, but they have also sparked a "eugenic impulse," referring to the idea of improving society by eliminating disabilities. While prenatal testing and treatments for Down syndrome have helped improve lives, they have also led to fewer births of people with Down syndrome, thereby reducing the presence of these individuals in society. This results in the marginalization of such people, who are seen as less desirable in society due to their diagnoses. The NIB authors explore the ongoing discrimination and bias that their children and families encounter. The commentary stresses the importance of seeing children with Down syndrome as people first, not just as their diagnoses, and recognizes the deeply personal and emotional journeys of the parents as they have learned to advocate for their children's dignity and inclusion.
A Wed, study studied this question.