Question 1) If young children cannot provide legally binding consent, they may, nevertheless, be able to offer their ass
Posted: Thu Jan 13, 2022 5:19 am
Question 1) If young children cannot provide legally binding
consent, they may, nevertheless, be able to offer their assent.
What key ethical difference between consent and assent?
a. consent is legal metric.
b. assent is only offered by a minor 15 years of age or
older.
c. assent requires understanding whereas consent does not.
d. assent is a lower standard than consent, which requires
understanding and reasoning ability.
Question 2) The development of assisted reproductive
technologies introduced a new set of biomedical, legal, and ethical
issues.
TRUE or FALSE
Question 3) A person who gestates a fetus for another
is called:
a. a social parent
b. a gestational surrogate
c. a genetic surrogate
d. a true parent
Question 4) Gestational surrogacy showed that there could
be a separation of genetic, gestational, and social mothers.
TRUE or FALSE
consent, they may, nevertheless, be able to offer their assent.
What key ethical difference between consent and assent?
a. consent is legal metric.
b. assent is only offered by a minor 15 years of age or
older.
c. assent requires understanding whereas consent does not.
d. assent is a lower standard than consent, which requires
understanding and reasoning ability.
Question 2) The development of assisted reproductive
technologies introduced a new set of biomedical, legal, and ethical
issues.
TRUE or FALSE
Question 3) A person who gestates a fetus for another
is called:
a. a social parent
b. a gestational surrogate
c. a genetic surrogate
d. a true parent
Question 4) Gestational surrogacy showed that there could
be a separation of genetic, gestational, and social mothers.
TRUE or FALSE