[Download] "Biomedical Enhancements Entering a New Era: Products and Services to Boost Performance, Appearance, Or Capability Are Here to Stay, And Better, More Sophisticated Ones Are on the Way. Banning Them Would Be Misguided, But Regulation Will Be Needed." by Issues in Science and Technology # Book PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Biomedical Enhancements Entering a New Era: Products and Services to Boost Performance, Appearance, Or Capability Are Here to Stay, And Better, More Sophisticated Ones Are on the Way. Banning Them Would Be Misguided, But Regulation Will Be Needed.
- Author : Issues in Science and Technology
- Release Date : January 22, 2009
- Genre: Engineering,Books,Professional & Technical,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 251 KB
Description
Recently, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved a drug to lengthen and darken eyelashes. Botox and other wrinkle-reducing injections have joined facelifts, tummy tucks, and vaginal reconstruction to combat the effect of aging. To gain a competitive edge, athletes use everything from steroids and blood transfusions to recombinant-DNA-manufactured hormones, Lasik surgery, and artificial atmospheres. Students supplement caffeine-containing energy drinks with Ritalin and the new alertness drug modafinil. The military spends millions of dollars every year on biological research to increase the warfighting abilities of our soldiers. Parents perform genetic tests on their children to determine whether they have a genetic predisposition to excel at explosive or endurance sports. All of these are examples of biomedical enhancements: interventions that use medical and biological technology to improve performance, appearance, or capability in addition to what is necessary to achieve, sustain, or restore health. The use of biomedical enhancements, of course, is not new. Amphetamines were doled out to troops during World War II. Athletes at the turn of the 20th century ingested narcotics. The cognitive benefits of caffeine have been known for at least a millennium. Ancient Greek athletes swallowed herbal infusions before competitions. The Egyptians brewed a drink containing a relative of Viagra at least 1,000 years before Christ. But modern drug development and improvements in surgical technique are yielding biomedical enhancements that achieve safer, larger, and more targeted enhancement effects than their predecessors, and more extraordinary technologies are expected to emerge from ongoing discoveries in human genetics. (In addition, there are biomechanical enhancements that involve the use of computer implants and nanotechnology, which are beyond the scope of this article.).