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Social Science & Medicine 60 (2005) 2085–2095


www.elsevier.com/locate/socscimed

Framing the fetus in medical work: rituals and practices


Clare Williams
Department of Midwifery and Women’s Health, King’s College London, Rm 5.4 Waterloo Bridge Wing, 150 Stamford Street,
London SE1 9NN, UK
Available online 13 November 2004

Abstract

What does it mean to investigate the fetus, and what might be the potential consequences? Although a number of
feminists have engaged with the debate around the status of the fetus in terms of the possible implications for women,
discussion of fetuses has been avoided by many feminists, in response to the politics around the abortion debate.
However, there has recently been a move to explore the ways in which the meanings and significance of the fetus can be
socially constructed. Set within a United Kingdom context, this paper focuses on two areas which are arguably
changing perceptions of the fetus: the recent ‘discovery’ of fetal ‘pain’; and the growing recognition of the fetus as a
patient. One of the key concerns of those who support the autonomy of women is that any increasing discourse around
the concept of fetal patienthood may promote the notion of fetal personhood, which in turn may affect the status of
pregnant women. In exploring perceptions of the fetus, this article firstly cites some of the key policy documents and
medical articles which were published during the 1990s, looking at apparent shifts in the ways in which the fetus is
discussed in terms of pain and patienthood. It then explores how practitioners from different disciplines talked about
fetal pain and patienthood in relation to the clinical setting. Although this paper does not provide conclusive evidence
of a wholesale shift in terms of how the fetus is perceived by practitioners, it does point to subtle shifts occurring, which
may or may not be significant. It is important to track such shifts closely, primarily because of the potential impact on
women, but also for others involved, including practitioners. Such tracking needs to be set within specific cultural and
policy contexts.
r 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Keywords: Fetus; Fetal pain; Fetal patient; Prenatal screening; UK

Introduction controversial. For obvious reasons, anti-abortionists


prefer to use terms such as baby, or unborn child. In
Although a number of feminists have engaged with contrast, many feminists shy away from using the word
the debate around the status of the fetus in terms of the baby, not wanting to give the fetus human status. There
possible implications for women (e.g. Spallone, 1989; is a tendency to use the word fetus, although this leads
Stacey, 1992; Rose, 1994; Casper, 1998), discussion of to a further dilemma, as they recognise it to be a word
fetuses has been studiously avoided by many, in that pregnant women themselves rarely use (Markens,
response to the politics around the abortion debate Browner, & Press,1999). If the word fetus is controver-
(Mitchell, 2001). Even the use of the word fetus can be sial, the use of its image is arguably even more so. Pro-
life advocates have worked hard to forge a rhetorical
Tel.: +44 78500 93522; fax: +44 208 898 2661. connection between the word fetus and an arresting
E-mail address: clare@williams-forbes.freeserve.co.uk visual image of the late term fetus, thereby ensuring
(C. Williams). that in such circumstances, the fetus performs an

0277-9536/$ - see front matter r 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.09.003
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2086 C. Williams / Social Science & Medicine 60 (2005) 2085–2095

anti-abortion service. In contrast, those who are pro- same way as for any other dead child’ with guidance
choice rarely use images of fetuses to support their case placing importance on giving parents opportunities for
(Williams, Kitzinger, & Henderson, 2003). ‘showing respect for their babies with naming ceremo-
However, there has recently been a move to explore nies, memorials and memorial services and books of
the ways in which the meanings and significance of the remembrance’ (Independent Review Group on Reten-
fetus can be socially constructed (eg Casper, 1998). As tion of Organs at Post-Mortem, 2001, p. 2). There has
Michaels and Morgan argue: ‘While the effort to also been an increasing acknowledgement that the
buttress women’s procreation agency ought to proceed disposal of ‘fetal remainsymust be carried out as
apace, it is increasingly difficult to maintain the position respectfully a possible’, and that ‘parents may wish to
that fetuses do not merit a place on the social stage’ mark the occasion with a small ceremony’ (Independent
(1999, pp. 5–6). Review Group on Retention of Organs at Post-Mortem,
There are a number of interconnected innovations 2001: 3).
which have led to this shift towards viewing the fetus as In addition to these shifts, there have been a number
meriting a place ‘on the social stage’. These include the of important changes in medical practice relating to
recent ways in which, ‘the use of fetal images, visualiza- viability which may have affected ideas about fetal
tion techniques and medical procedures have placed status. Reflecting on the changes that have occurred
‘‘life before birth’’ in front of our cultural eyes’ during his career, John Wyatt, a neonatal consultant,
(Michaels & Morgan, 1999, p. 6). It is recognised that writes:
recent advances enabling higher quality fetal ultrasound
images have played a central role in facilitating this
In 1967 when the Abortion Act came into force in
extension of rituals and practices. For example, such
Britain, the scientific understanding of fetal develop-
images enable antenatal diagnoses and medical proce-
ment and behaviour was rudimentaryyEven new-
dures; they can potentially change the meanings of
born babies were thought to be incapable of any
pregnancy for women (Rothman, 1989; Mitchell, 2001;
sophisticated perceptual or learning abilities. As a
Taylor, 1998), men (Draper, 2002; McCreight, 2004) and
medical student, I was taught that newborn babies
health practitioners (Williams, Alderson, & Farsides,
were blind, unaware of their surroundings and
2001; 2002b); and it is argued that they can mark a
incapable of feeling pain. Twenty years later we have
change in social status for the fetus, to that of ‘social
discovered that babies have a range of sophisticated
child’ (Draper, 2002; Williams, 2003). As Mitchell and
abilitiesy In 1967 long term survival of preterm
Georges (1998) state:
babies born before 32 weeks was unusual and 28
Pregnant women expect that they will ‘‘meet their weeks seemed an absolute barrierySurvival at 23
baby’’ on the ultrasound screen, and are encouraged and 24 weeks gestation is now commonplace and
by experts to see in the image digitalized evidence of a occasional survival at 22 weeks and less than 500 g
gendered, conscious and sentient fetal actor commu- birthweight has been described (2001, ii p. 16–17).
nicating its demands and needs (1998, p.120).
Viability issues are also linked to the law in the United
Michaels and Morgan (1999) argue that such practices
Kingdom (UK) in relation to abortion criteria. Cur-
can potentially lead to ‘person making’:
rently, for any anomaly identified in the first or second
Though the criteria governing the attribution of trimester (up to 24 weeks gestation), termination of
personhood are dynamic and subject to change, pregnancy can be offered. Prior to the passing of the
rituals and practices that govern person making are Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act in 1991,
extended to fetuses: fetuses are sexed, named, parents were not given the option of terminating a
‘‘photographed’’, surgically altered, spoken to and pregnancy if a fetal anomaly was discovered after
about, and even speak themselves, Hollywood style viability, although labour could be induced early. UK
(1999:6). law now allows termination of pregnancy on the
grounds of serious fetal anomaly at any gestation up
A further example of this extension of rituals and to term (40 weeks) (Statham, Solomou, & Green, 2001).
practices to fetuses is the way in which legislative and Set within a UK context, this paper focuses on two
hospital practices in relation to pregnancy loss have linked ‘rituals and practices’ which are arguably chan-
changed over the past decade (McCreight, 2004). This is ging perceptions of the fetus: the recent ‘discovery’ of
partly due to the 1992 Still Birth Definition Act which fetal ‘pain’; and the growing recognition of the fetus as a
stated that a stillbirth should be legally defined as a child patient. Although these issues are of course closely tied
born dead after the 24th week of pregnancy, rather than to the abortion debate, in this article that debate will not
after the 28th week of pregnancy. Following registra- be addressed explicitly. It should also be stated that
tion, ‘burial or cremation can then take place, in the although the paper focuses on the fetus, I place—and
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therefore discuss—this topic within the overall frame- at apparent shifts in the ways in which the fetus is talked
work of women’s health issues (Casper, 1998). about in terms of pain and patienthood. It then explores
Although, as argued by Michaels and Morgan (1999), how health care practitioners, whose daily work brings
the criteria governing the attribution of personhood are them into contact with pregnant women, talk about fetal
not fixed, one of the key concerns of those who support pain and patienthood.
the autonomy of women is that any increasing discourse
around the concept of fetal patienthood may promote
the notion of fetal personhood, which in turn may affect Methods
the status of pregnant women (McLean, 1999). Fletcher
and Jonsen (1991) argue that: This paper reports on one aspect of an ongoing
project which focuses on the extent to which genetic
The designation of the fetus as patient (i.e. as a developments and new reproductive technologies might
medically treatable being) would not seem equivalent be changing practitioners’ and policy makers’ percep-
to an attribution of personhood. The latter concept, tions of the fetus, women, and the maternal–fetal
without doubt, bears much more philosophical and relationship. Following Ethics Committee approval,
theological weight than the former and requires part of the research project has involved observation
considerably more than ‘treatability’ to justify its in two London hospitals, in a variety of clinical settings
attribution to the fetus (1991, p. 16). which pregnant women attend. Twenty in depth inter-
views have been carried out with a variety of practi-
However, in practice, these concepts may not be as
tioners working within these hospitals, selected because
clearcut as Fletcher and Jonsen believe. From a legal
their work brings them into contact with pregnant
perspective, McLean argues that, despite the lack of
women and fetuses in different, often contrasting
agreement on the moral status of the fetus and the legal
settings. In order to set the study within a wider context,
clarity that in the UK, the fetus has no rights, prenatal
interviews are also being carried out nationally with
technologies such as ultrasound tend to promote the
individuals selected as having particular perspectives on
notion of two ‘patients’, in contrast to earlier inter-
women and fetuses, for example, representatives of
dependent models of the woman–fetus relationship. She
disability rights groups, and eight such interviews have
argues that this changing perception may have both
been completed.
legal and ethical repercussions, Part of the difficulty is
This paper draws on the interviews carried out with
that four of the major principles of Western medical
medical and midwifery practitioners. The interviews
ethics, justice, respect for autonomy, beneficence and
were conducted as ‘guided conversations’ (Lofland and
non-maleficence (Beauchamp and Childress, 1989) are
Lofland, 1984), in order to encourage respondents to
predominately individualized concepts, containing little
give their own accounts and meanings. Interview themes
capacity or authority to balance the competing needs of
vary according to the individual, but core themes include
patients (Williams, Alderson, & Farsides, 2001).
topics such as the values and beliefs which inform the
Locating fetuses in both material and symbolic realms
individual’s thinking in relation to fetal status; the
enables us to examine how meanings and practices form
influences on their thoughts about fetal status, including
around the fetus, and are disseminated. This emphasis
any specific policy documents and articles; and whether
on meanings also focuses attention on representations,
genetic and other technologies are changing maternal–-
and on how fetuses are differently constructed within
fetal relationships. With permission, all interviews were
specific practices and contexts (Casper, 1998; Morgan
taped and transcribed. Transcripts were analysed by
and Michaels, 1999). It is apparent that fetuses can be
content for emergent themes (Weber, 1990), which were
constructed in a myriad of alternative ways, reiterating
then coded (Strauss & Corbin, 1990). Rather than being
the notion that, ‘fetuses are not natural entities, but
‘representative’, quotes have been specifically selected to
dynamic cultural constructions crafted to suit certain
illustrate the different ways in which these practitioners
agendas’ (Mitchell, 2001. p. 210). As Casper argues in
talked about women and fetuses. To protect anonymity,
relation to her work on fetal surgery:
each individual has been allocated a number.
Not all fetuses are patients, nor are all fetuses A further strand of the project has been an examina-
considered persons; even the same fetus may shift tion of key publications, mainly medical/nursing arti-
between these different statuses. We need to ask who cles, reports and policy documents, from 1990 to the
views the unborn patient as a person, under what current time, in order to explore whether the ways in
conditions, with what consequencesy (1998, p. 217). which the fetus is discussed have shifted. Although this
was not a systematic review, relevant journals and
In exploring perceptions of the fetus, this article firstly websites were searched in detail. Asking practitioners
cites some of the key UK policy documents and medical and other key stakeholders from a wide variety of
articles which were published during the 1990s, looking backgrounds which publications had influenced their
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perceptions and practices in relation to the fetus also ‘Children and adults come to a conscious apprecia-
helped ensure that relevant documents were identified. tion of pain through a developmental process which
The material was analysed by careful reading of the fetus has yet to experience. Though biological
publications in order to trace any shifts over time in development is necessary for the conscious apprecia-
how the fetus was described and presented. The next tion of pain to occur, the mistake is to say that
section looks at some of the medical articles and policy biological development is enough. ‘‘Fetal pain’’ is
documents, highlighting publications relevant to the therefore a misnomer at any stage of fetal develop-
topics of fetal pain and patienthood. ment.’ (Derbyshire & Furedi, 1996, p. 795).
‘..temporary thalamocortical connections start to
form at about 17 weeks and become established
Themes from 26 weeks. It seems very likely that a fetus can
feel pain from that stageyThough we cannot
Fetal pain and patienthood in reports and medical articles measure pain, we can measure fetal hormonal stress
responses, which occur from at least 23 weeks of
In 1994, an influential article published in the Lancet gestationy’ (Glover & Fisk, 1996, p. 796).
on the effects of intrauterine needling of fetuses at 23 or
more weeks of gestation, gave rise to discussions about In 1997, ‘Fetal Awareness’, a Report published by the
whether fetuses feel pain (Giannakoulopoulos, Sepelve- RCOG stated that:
da, Kourtis, Glover, & Fisk,1994). This was followed in ‘The Working Party concludes that it is not possible
1995 by a Report requested by the Department of for the fetus to be aware of events before 26 weeks
Health on fetal pain, which firmly ruled out the gestation. Because of the uncertainty that attends
possibility of a fetus experiencing pain before 26 weeks estimates of gestational age, it may be appropriate to
gestation (Fitzgerald, 1995). In 1995, the British Journal consider providing some form of fetal analgesia [pain
of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (BJOG) published an relief] or sedation for major intrauterine procedures
article entitled, ‘Is third trimester abortion justified?’, in performed at or after 24 weeks gestation (1997, p.
which the authors attempt to: 23)yWe recommend that practitioners who under-
take diagnostic or therapeutic surgical procedures
‘address the question of whether the third trimester
upon the fetus at or after 24 weeks gestationyconsi-
fetus is a patient. The clinical utility of this approach
der the requirements for fetal analgesia and sedation’
is that, as a rule, patients should not be killed by
(1997, p. 4).
physicians. A fetus is a patient when it is considered
viabley This is generally accepted to be 24 weeksy However, only 5 months later, in 1998, another
For many anomaliesyneither death nor absence of RCOG Report, ‘A consideration of the law and ethics
cognitive developmental capacity is a certain or near in relation to late termination of pregnancy for fetal
certain outcomey Therefore, a woman’s exercise of abnormality’, showed a marked shift in language, as
autonomy to request a third trimester abortion for a exemplified by the move from asking practitioners to,
fetus with an anomaly, such as Down’s syndrome, ‘consider’ requirements for fetal analgesia, to stating
lacks ethical authority, and as a matter of profes- that they have ‘a duty’ to prevent pain. Although the
sional integrity no physician should carry out such a 1997 Report guidelines relate to diagnostic or therapeu-
request.’ (Chervenak, McCullough, & Campbell, tic procedures, as opposed to late terminations, the
1995, pp. 434–435). wording is significant:

In this article, then, Chervenak et al. (1995) are clearly ‘The obstetrician has a duty to protect the fetus from
linking fetal viability with patienthood, and conse- suffering pain in all terminations of pregnancy
quently, with an entitlement to consideration and regardless of gestation (1998, p. 17)y In late
possible protection. terminations for fetal abnormality, or in the interests
In 1996, a Report published by the Royal College of of the mother, methods must be chosen to avoid the
Obstetrics and Gynaecology (RCOG), ‘Termination of risk of fetal pain’ (1998, p. 18).
pregnancy for fetal abnormality in England, Wales and
In 1998 a clinical review was published on fetal
Scotland’, stated that, ‘[the evidence] suggests strongly
medicine in the BMJ written by David James, a
that the immaturity of the fetal central nervous system
professor of ‘fetomaternal’ medicine, in which he states:
prevents conscious awareness of pain before 26 weeks
gestation’ (1996, p. 12). This was followed by four ‘In the 13 years since the first annual symposium of
articles published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), ‘‘The Fetus as a Patient’’, diagnostic skills with fetal
all entitled, ‘Do fetuses feel pain?’, and below are quotes disease have improved enormously, but therapeutic
from the two most contrasting articles: approaches remain limitedyArguably, the most
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significant advance is that most professionals and Fetal pain and patienthood in the clinical context
parents consider the fetus as a separate individual
and a potential patient in his or her own righty’ As Casper argues, decision making about procedures
(1998, p. 1580). and practices are key events by which definitions of the
fetus can be formed (1998). In this section I will explore
In 1999, the BJOG published another article by
how the medical, midwifery and nurse practitioners I
Chervenak, McCullogh, and Campbell entitled, ‘Third
interviewed talked about the issues of fetal pain and
trimester abortion: is compassion enough?’ in which
patienthood. These practitioners were all involved with
they conclude:
pregnant women in their daily work. The majority of
‘It follows from the arguments we have presented staff quoted below worked in two Fetal Medicine Units
here, based on virtues and ethical principles relevant (FMUs), where a variety of fetal procedures were
to the concept of the fetus as a patient, that third offered at the time this study was undertaken. These
trimester abortion should be restricted to pregnancies included fetal surgery for diaphragmatic hernias; fetal
complicated by fetal anomalies in which either death blood sampling; the use of catheters to drain excess fluid
or absence of cognitive developmental capacity is from fetal organs; fetoscopy, used to diagnose and treat
certain or near certain. Only in these cases should fetuses; laser surgery for twin to twin transfusion;
compassion for the pregnant woman be decisive. In selective termination of a fetus in multiple pregnancies,
all other cases, integrity requires that doctors refuse where other fetuses were at risk; feticide (which usually
requests for third trimester abortion’ (1999, p. 295). involves injecting the fetal heart with potassium chloride
under ultrasound guidance, leading to almost instant
This was the article most frequently cited by practi- death of the fetus) for fetal anomalies. Therefore, staff
tioners as influencing their practice. One of the reasons it might carry out potentially life saving fetal treatment,
was so influential was that the article was ‘Editor’s followed immediately by feticide for a fetal anomaly.
Choice’, with the editor stating: The inherent ambiguity of this situation is explored in
‘With the technology of the late twentieth century a detail in a separate paper (Williams, 2004).
fetus is considered to be viable at 24 weeks of
gestation: after this point therefore the doctor has a Fetal pain
duty of beneficence to the fetus, and should show it The first quote is from a senior midwife who worked
the intellectually disciplined compassion he affords it in a hospital where fetal surgery was being performed,
to adults who are ill’ (1999, p. vii). and who attended planning meetings for such proce-
dures:
Here, the editor is making a powerful case for linking
fetal viability with an entitlement to be treated as adults Midwife, 7: I must say I haven’t really thought about
might be. it [fetal pain], I really haven’t. Maybe I just don’t like
In another article published later that year, again in to go down that route. But it’s an interesting oneyI
the BJOG, ‘Fetal pain: implications for research and don’t understand how fetuses wouldn’t feel pain. Do
practice’, Glover and Fisk (1999) argue that: you know what I mean? So it makes absolute sense
that it will feel pain, but I just somehow, it’s most
‘The fetus is currently treated as though it feels
bizarre, now that you’ve asked me that question, I
nothing, and is given no analgesia or anaesthesia for
kind of can’t make the leap. I just haven’t really
potentially painful interventionsyGiven the anato-
thought about it.
mical evidence, it is possible that the fetus can feel
pain from 20 weeks and is caused distress by The next two quotes are from FMU midwives
interventions from as early as 15 or 16 weeksyin involved in fetal procedures, including feticide:
the UK, even frogs and fishes are required by Act of
Parliament to be protected by anaesthesia from Midwife, 20: Before a feticide, parents ask, ‘‘will he
possible suffering due to invasive procedures. Why suffer?’’ To be honest we don’t know, we think
not human beings?’ (1999, pp. 884–885). probably not, but we don’t know, and I think we are
too scared to really think about it.
To conclude this section, despite the uncertainty, there
appears to have been a slow but seemingly steady Midwife, 9: But when it comes to fetal pain, I don’t
progression in the medical articles and reports cited, know—I really don’t know and I think it’s all very
towards recognising the fetus as a patient, and as an unclear, but I would say it’s 21 weeks—whether we
entity which may feel ‘pain’, with the advice to say it’s before that I don’t know. Do they [fetuses]
practitioners becoming increasingly firm on the subject know what pain is to be able to perceive it as pain?
of fetal analgesia. It is against this background that the But certainly, they react to having a needle stuck in
practitioners I interviewed in 2002/3 worked. their chest and their heart stopped with a drugy
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An obstetrician who worked with these midwives, and clinical outcomes in comparison with neonates receiving
was involved in carrying out such procedures stated: paralyzing agents alone (Anand, Sippel, & Aynsley-
Green, 1987). This research and subsequent studies
Obstetrician,15: I think there are reasonable grounds culminated in a major reconsideration of neonatal
for thinking that the fetus doesn’t feel pain in the way analgesic practice (Anand & Hickey, 1992; Derbyshire,
we understand it before about 24 weeksy I think 22 2003). A study published in 1996 (de Lima, Lloyd-
weeks is a safe cut off point for the fetus not Thomas, Howard, Sumner, & Quinn) showed that by
experiencing painyI must say, if parents ask me, I then, only a decade later, there was widespread
just say no. agreement amongst paediatric anaesthetists that even
A gynaecologist who also performs late terminations the smallest, most premature babies respond to painful
of pregnancy said: stimuli, and that attention to pain relief was an
important part of neonatal anaesthetic practice.
Gynaecologist, 22: After 18 weeks if I do a feticide, I This shift has led to speculation as to whether or not
put a needle in the baby’s heartyI’m not sure it’s the fetus, often of the same gestational age as the
necessary, but I do it I suppose as a sort of PR premature baby being treated, might experience pain. In
exercise, because I think it’s important to be seen to the first article cited in the previous section, Gianna-
be caring about the fetus if you see what I mean.. so I koulopoulos et al. (1994) demonstrated that intrauterine
feel I need to do it, it’s the politics of caring about the needling to obtain blood samples from fetuses at 20–34
fetusy weeks gestation resulted in a hormonal stress response
(Derbyshire, 2003). However, critics such as Derbyshire
When discussing a specific surgical procedure per-
(2003) believe that this response cannot be equated with
formed on a fetus, a fetal medicine consultant stated:
the multidimensional phenomena he defines as pain.
FMU consultant,13: At 26 weeks, it’s possible that Some argue that in the absence of consensus, practi-
fetuses do feel some discomfort. It would have felt tioners should assume fetal pain is experienced until
discomfort. We gave that fetus [names a drug] which proved otherwise, and act accordingly (Glover & Fisk,
is a pain killer, and also a paralysing agent..that was 1996). Others believe that this might lead to unnecessary
in part obviously to anaesthetise or give pain relief to anaesthetic procedures, and potentially increase distress
the fetus, but the main objective was to keep the fetus for pregnant women undergoing procedures including
still as we didn’t want it wriggling around. Clearly if late terminations of pregnancy or fetal surgery. Such
the fetus is thrashing around it’s more distressing debates have helped lead to the current lack of
because it takes longer to do the procedureythere agreement about whether—or when—fetal pain might
are a number of major connections on the frontal need to be considered, as illustrated by practitioners’
lobes that are required before pain is perceived as comments, with estimates ranging from 18 to 26 weeks
unpleasant, and that’s probably not before 26 weeks. gestation. Midwives 7 and 20 allude to the difficulties
that some practitioners have in even thinking about the
The notion of fetal pain is a controversial one, being issue, whilst Gynaecologist 22 highlights the fact that
dependent on how pain is defined. Although there this is a highly charged politically contested area, when
appears to be widespread agreement that neonates and he talks about ‘the politics of caring about the fetus’.
fetuses launch a hormonal and neural response to
invasive procedures, some would argue that this cannot
Fetal patienthood
be considered proof that there is a concurrent experience
All fetal treatment necessitates accessing the fetus
of pain (Derbyshire, 2003). Derbyshire argues:
through the pregnant woman’s body, and non-surgical
An experience [of pain] implies sensations have been treatments that may affect the fetus and mother have
interpreted in a conscious manner. Even when long been a part of pregnancy care. However, recent
combined with observations of behavior and im- advances in fetal treatment, including fetal surgery, may
proved clinical outcome when using anesthetics, there mark a shift in the status of the fetus, and the impact on
is still no proof there is an experience of pain (2003, women. Fetal surgery is a complex procedure which
p. 3). requires the pregnant woman to undergo uterine
surgery, often more than once, usually under general
The ‘improved clinical outcome’ refers to the fact that anaesthetic. Although fetal surgery is still unusual,
until the late 1980s, there was a widespread assumption worldwide the numbers appear to be increasing, and
that neonates and infants were incapable of perceiving there is a move towards surgery for non-lethal condi-
pain, which meant they were seldom given pain relief for tions, as an editorial in the BMJ recently stated:
operations, including major surgery. Work carried out
in the 1980s demonstrated that neonates given pain relief Surgical intervention on the human fetus has been
and paralyzing agents prior to surgery had improved performed for more than two decades in the United
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States, primarily at two centres. Recently, fetal than just do nothingyBut I mean the situation for
surgery has become an international endeavour, with them [couple] was, well, if it’s such a bad outlook
nearly a dozen centres worldwide. Also, until anyway let’s do this, because it might give them a
recently, only fetuses with life threatening defects chance.
were considered candidates for prenatal correction.
Now fetal surgical procedures are being performed Another fetal medicine consultant, talking about a
for non-lethal conditions (Farmer, 2003, p. 461). couple’s decision to opt for fetal surgery, stated:

The first quote illustrates what one midwife thinks FMU consultant, 13: They entered into it on a very
fetal surgery signifies about fetal status: altruistic basis, ‘‘Yes, we know this is experimental,
we might be lucky—if we’re not we feel that we did
Midwife, 23: If you’re even talking about surgery, the best for this baby but also that we might have
then you’re going to see that baby now as a person contributed towards progress and a technique that
because obviously something that’s a clot of blood or might save somebody else’s baby’’, so quite altruistic
a developing thing that’s not human yet or not a about it.
baby, you’re not going to be talking about surgery.
Recognising these potential pressures, an obstetrician
Following on from this notion that fetal surgery might talked about how she approaches the issue of fetal
equate with fetal personhood, the following quotes surgery with parents. This consultant felt that she had a
illustrate what might happen to mothers within this different approach to that of her FMU consultant
context: colleagues, because of her combined professional focus
Midwife, 7: I’ve never heard much mention of the on both mother and fetus:
mother as the surgery is set upy so obviously the Obstetrician, 15: I think there can be a lot of
mothers are choosing to go through this major emotional pressure on parents. Now, I’m not saying
procedure, but the focus is on the fetusy the that practitioners necessarily play to that pressure to
discussion is very fetus oriented and there is very be allowed to do their radical procedure, but I do
little mention in those discussions ever about the think that unless you are very careful to be almost
motheryI’m amazed at what some women put negative about the procedure, the parents will read
themselves throughyand of course those are babies into it that this is something that people do that
that not long ago you wouldn’t have been planning hopefully will work. I think you have to be very
for at all because they wouldn’t have been surviving. careful there because it’s natural that most parents
So in terms of planning and managing the service the will grasp at any straw going and I think you have to
needs of the fetus in their own right are considerable be very straight with them about the experimental
really, and growing. nature, if it is experimental.
Midwife, 6: ywe call it the Fetal Medicine Unit, but
There appears to be an inherent paradox, whereby the
in fact that’s not true because you have to go through
potential transformation of the fetus into a patient may
the mother in order to get to the fetus, and everyone
increase the responsibilities of the pregnant woman,
is so preoccupied with what’s ok for the fetus that we
whilst concurrently decreasing her visibility. Even in
actually forget what the mother has to go through
these quotes, the decision is talked about as being one
yconsideration is given to the mother, but not to the
that ‘parents’ make, although it is of course the pregnant
same extent, and maybe that’s not a good thing.
woman who will be undergoing the surgery.
Although this research project did not interview There are also an increasing number of fetal condi-
women, one of the aims was to explore how practi- tions which are being detected by enhanced antenatal
tioners felt that any changing perceptions about the ultrasound, for which treatment is available post
fetus might impact on the status of women. The quotes delivery. The following quote is from a nurse who
above indicate how women have the potential to become specialises in the care of babies and children with cleft lip
less visible during discussions about fetal surgery, and palate. Here she describes her approach to pregnant
supporting the work of Casper (1998). Various reasons women and their partners when the condition is
were put forward as to why women might opt for fetal diagnosed antenatally, which is becoming an increas-
surgery. In response to a question about whether women ingly common aspect of her work:
might feel under any pressure, a fetal medicine
Nurse, 24: I think the baby becomes much more of a
consultant said:
person than it would without a diagnosisyI find it
FMU consultant, 8: Yes, I do, I doyand I think very helpful if I know if it’s a he or she, not itya lot
people want to feel that they’re doing—you always of my work is talking about what will happen when
feel better don’t you, if you’ve done something rather the baby’s bornyI suppose I am trying to encourage
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2092 C. Williams / Social Science & Medicine 60 (2005) 2085–2095

early bonding before the baby is even born, to help Lewando Hundt et al. 2001). However, there is also a
them more. I talk about it more as a baby than a simultaneous recognition that women’s choices are
fetus, as a person who has personality already. I ask made within the context of familial, social, cultural
the sex, name, I ask to see photos. and economic constraints (Henry, 2003), and that
practitioners can have a powerful ideological impact
To conclude this section, it appears that the increasing in, ‘shaping the understandings women have of what
number of diagnoses of fetal conditions, leading either their experience of pregnancy should be, and how
to fetal surgery or to treatment post delivery, at least has ‘responsible’ women should act’ (Kent, 2000, p. 179).
the potential to shift the status of the fetus towards that For example, the offer of prenatal screening and testing
of a patient, with possible links to personhood. At the can be seen by some women as a recommendation, and
same time, this shift can alter the status of the pregnant may help promote the idea that the condition being
woman, increasing her responsibilities, whilst potentially screened for is serious enough to at least contemplate
making her less visible. termination of an affected pregnancy (Press & Browner,
1997). In a similar way, it could be argued that the offer
of fetal surgery may be seen as a recommendation by
Discussion and conclusion some women, particularly when the alternatives appear
bleak. This in no way implies that practitioners put any
In this article I have argued that debates about fetal kind of overt pressure on women to follow one course or
pain and patienthood within the literature, combined another, but it highlights the ethical dilemmas involved.
with concurrent shifts in antental clinical practice, may As Obstetrician 15 noted, for her, discussing such
be subtly altering UK practitioners’ perceptions of the procedures with women could mean ‘being almost
fetus. Although I make no claims for the participants negative about the procedure’. However, the current
being ‘representative’, the research took place in two powerful rhetoric of individual choice and personal
hospitals, and it seems likely that these shifting responsibility is set firmly within a consumerist discourse
perceptions may not be unique to these settings. (Lippman, 1999; Kerr & Cunningham-Burley, 2000),
However, such claims must also be seen within the and previous research with practitioners involved in
broader context. Although fetal surgery is still unusual prenatal screening (Williams et al., 2002a) found a
in the UK, there is a recognition that pregnancy is being reluctance to argue against individual consumer choice,
seen increasingly as an ‘at risk’ time, with every pregnant as this links so closely with arguing against individual
woman being offered an increasing number of screen- rights (Chadwick, 1999). It also goes against the
ing—and diagnostic—possibilities (Petersen, 1999; Wil- ‘nondirective’ rhetoric which predominates in the area
liams, Alderson, & Farsides, 2002a). As the recent of prenatal screening and treatment, although the extent
Health Technology Assessment Review (Bricker et al., to which this approach is possible, or even desirable, has
2000) also points out, antenatal screening programmes been questioned (Williams, Alderson, & Farsides,
such as first trimester screening by ultrasound, tend to 2002c).
‘creep’ in, rather than being strategically introduced. As The research findings highlight the possibility that
stated in the introduction, I see these issues predomi- both fetal surgery and the increasing detection of fetal
nantly as women’s health issues, which is why it is conditions for which treatment is available post delivery,
important to investigate the various ways in which have the potential to shift the status of the fetus to that
women and others, including partners, families and of patient, with possible links to personhood. However,
practitioners, make fetuses meaningful in their lives. whilst the fetus may become more visible, pregnant
Mitchell argues that: women were seen by some to become less visible. This
being pregnant at this particular historical moment ties in with a longstanding body of work (e.g. Oakley,
requires women to be tremendously socially adep- 1986; Petchesky, 1987; Martin, 1993; Casper, 1998)
tythe dichotomous language of self versus other, or which has linked other reproductive technologies such as
a separate person lying inside the body of a woman, ultrasound with the potential ‘erasure’ of women, whilst
does not adequately reflect women’s diverse experi- it simultaneously assists in the creation of the fetus as a
ences of pregnancy and fetality. Neither does the subject (Kent, 2000). There was also a recognition that
assumption that women having ultrasound and some women might feel a pressure, or responsibility to
reading advice books, will passively accept being undergo fetal surgery. Layne (2003) argues that the
controlled by dominant fetocentric messages (2001, women’s health movement itself, with its emphasis on
p. 183). individual control, has inadvertently resulted in women
whose pregnancies end badly as blameworthy, and as
Recent research findings have shown pregnant women responsible for their pregnancy losses. Beck-Gernshein
can be active agents, rather than merely passive victims, (2000) also believes that with new options being
in relation to reproductive technologies (eg Weiss, 1995; offered in reproductive medicine, there are subtle signs
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C. Williams / Social Science & Medicine 60 (2005) 2085–2095 2093

that blame is attached to women who do not act patienthood, which may or may not be significant.
‘responsibly’: Although the concept of fetal patienthood does not
directly link with personhood, it is one of a number of
yfreedom of choice is proclaimed as a basic right, ‘rituals and practices’ being extended to fetuses, which
with a great deal of goodwill and good intention- can govern ‘person making’ (Michaels & Morgan, 1999).
sybut on the other hand, there is the momentum of It would seem important to closely track such subtle
technology, and in gradual steps—albeit at first changes, primarily because of the potential impact for
hardly noticeable—the concept of responsibility women, but also, for others involved with the produc-
changes its content; it is being expanded and adapted tion and construction of fetuses, including practitioners.
along with the increasing options of technology Although international comparisons are of course
(2000, p. 132). useful, such tracking needs to be set within specific
cultural and policy contexts.
Further, Markens, Browner & Press state that, ‘ythis
expansion of maternal responsibilities to the gestational
period signals a shift in the focus of pregnancy from the
Acknowledgements
health of the woman to the health of the fetus (1997, p.
353). It is such potential effects of increased prenatal
I would like to thank all those who participated in this
screening and testing which recently led Getz and
research, and acknowledge the support of the Wellcome
Kirkengen (2003) to stress the need for paying careful
Trust Biomedical Ethics programme in funding my post-
attention to the crucial distinction between technological
doctoral fellowship. I also thank the referees, whose
development and implementation, and for, ‘scrutinizing
perceptive comments have greatly improved the paper.
the interface between prenatal testing and human
experience’ (2003, p. 2045).
Similarly, the slowly increasing recognition attached
to taking fetal ‘pain’, or fetal stress responses into References
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