Title: Ethical Aspects of ICT Implants in the Human Body
1Ethical Aspects of ICT Implants in the Human Body
- Rafael Capurro
- European Group on Ethics in Science and New
Technologies (EGE) de la Comisión Europea EGE
Opinion, March 16, 2005 - http//europa.eu.int/comm/european_group_ethics/in
dex_en.htm - Universidad de Ciencias Aplicadas, Stuttgart,
Alemania www.capurro.de - Workshop de Bioética en la Universidad de Talca
- 24-26 de enero de 2005, Talca, Chile
2Overview
- EGE Tasks and Opinions
- ICT Implants in the Human Body
- Categorisation of implantable devices
- Implantable devices on the market
- Implantable devices under development
- Ethical Aspects of ICT Implants
- Ethics and Public Policy
3The European Group on Ethics (EGE)
- The EGE is an independent, pluralist and
multitisciplinary body which advises the European
Commission on ethical aspects of science and new
technologies in connection with the preparation
and implementation of Community legislation or
policies.
4EGE Members (2001-2005)
- Prof. Göran HERMERÉN (Sweden), President,
Philosopher, Professor of Medical Ethics, Faculty
of Medicine, Lund University. - Prof. Linda NIELSEN (Denmark), Vice-President,
Professor of Law, Rector of the University of
Copenhagen. Prof. Nicos C. ALIVIZATOS (Greece),
Professor of Constitutional Law, University of
Athens. Prof. Rafael CAPURRO (Germany),
Professor of Information Management and
Information Ethics at University of Applied
Sciences. Prof. Inez DE BEAUFORT (The
Netherlands), Professor of Health Care Ethics at
the Medical Faculty of the Erasmus University,
Rotterdam. Prof. Yvon ENGLERT (Belgium), Head
of Fertility Clinic, Free University of Brussels
(ULB), Professor of Medical Ethics and
Deontology, ULB. Prof. Catherine LABRUSSE-RIOU
(France), Centre de recherche en droit privé,
Université de Paris. Dr. Anne McLAREN (United
Kingdom), Geneticist, Research Associate at
Wellcome CRC Institute, Cambridge. Prof. Pere
PUIGDOMÈNECH ROSELL (Spain), Research Professor
at the Department for Molecular Genetics,
Director of Institut de Biologia Molecular de
Barcelona, CSIC Prof. Stefano RODOTA (Italy),
Professor of Civil Law, University of Rome,
Chairman of the Italian Data Protection
Authority, Chairman of the European Group of the
Data Protection Authorities. Prof. Günter VIRT
(Austria), Professor of Theology, Institute of
Catholic Moral Theology, University of Vienna.
Prof. Peter WHITTAKER (Ireland), Biologist,
Professor of Biology, Institute of Environment,
Philosophy and Public Policy, University of
Lancaster, Furness College.
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6EGE Secretariat
- Dr. Michael D. Rogers, European Commission, BERL
10/345, rue de la Loi 200, B-1049 Brussels,
Belgium. - EGE-Website europa.eu.int/comm/european_group_eth
ics - EGE-Newsletter "Ethically Speaking" providing
also information on the activities of the
National Ethics Committees.
7Opinions 2001-2005
- Opinion n. 16 (2002)Ethical aspects of patenting
inventions involving human stem cells - Opinion n. 17 (2003)Ethical aspects of clinical
research in developing countries - Opinion n. 18 (2003)Ethical aspects of genetic
testing in the workplace - Opinion n. 19 (2004)Ethical aspects of cord
blood stem cells banks - Opinion n. 20 (2005)Ethical Aspects of ICT
implants in the human body
8Categorisation of ICT Implants
- Implantable devices can be categorised as
- medical
- non-medical
- Both as
- passive
- active
- Reversible or non reversible
- Stand-alone or online
- ICT implants and tags
9Implantable passive ICT medical devices
- Most passive implants are structural devices such
as - artificial joints
- vascular implants
- artificial valves
- Active medical implantable devices Directive
90/385/EEC
10Current active medical ICT implants
- Cardiovascular pacers for patients with
conduction disorders or heart failure - Cochlear and brainstem implants for patients with
hearing disorders - Deep brain stimulation
- for tremor control in patients with Parkinson's
disease - for essential tremor
- for obsessive-compulsive disorders
- Implantable Neurostimulation Devices
- Spinal cord stimulation for chronic pain
management - Sacral nerve stimulation for control of urinary
incontinence - Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) for seizure control
in epilepsy and mood control in severe depression
cases - Implantable programmable drug delivery pumps
- Intrathecal administration of Baclofen for
patients with Multiple Sclerosis with severe
spasticity - Insulin pump for Diabetes
11Future medical ICT implants
- Artificial vision
- Cortical implant for the blind bypassing the
non-working retina or optic nerve - BioMEMS Micro Electro-Mechanical Systems /
Biosensors on the order of size of a human red
blood cell - collect data about the physiological parameters,
communicate with an external diagnostic computer
system (drug release, blood analysis, recovering
cancer patients) - Direct Brain Control BCI (Brain Computer
Interfaces) BrainGate www.cyberkineticsinc.com - Memory BrainChip (artificial hippocambus) an
implantable brain chip could restore or enhance
memory
12Other medical ICT implants/prostheses
- The German company Otto Bock Healthcare produces
prostheses like the C-Leg which is a
chip-controlled leg. See http//www.ottobock.de/d
e
13Implantable Non-Medical Devices
- Passive devices An example of a passive device
is the radio frequency identification (RFID)
device. - Active devices use electrical impulses to
interact with the humans nervous system.
14Baja Beach Club
- http//www.bajabeach.es/
- Somos la primera discoteca del mundo en ofrecer
el VIP VeriChip. Mediante un chip digital
integrado, nuestros VIPs pueden identificarse
como tal, así como pagar sus consumiciones sin la
necesidad de aportar ningún tipo de documento.
15Baja Beach Club
- El objetivo de esta tecnología es llevar un
sistema de identificación a nivel mundial que
anule la necesidad de llevar documento de
identidad y tarjeta de crédito. El Verichip que
implantaremos en el Baja, no será sólo para el
Baja, también es útil para cualquier otra empresa
que haga uso de esta tecnología.
16Other non-medical applications
- Experiments as reported by Kevin Warwick
(Department of Cybernetics,University of Reading,
UK) - In Mexico (August 2004) microchips were implanted
in the arms of the Fiscal General and 160
Fiscals employees to control their access to a
confidential documentation centre and possibly
track them in case of kidnapping.
17Other non-medical applications
- The UK Prime Minister announced (August 2004) a
programme whereby the five thousand dangerous UK
criminals would be tagged with electronic
devices and thereby tracked continuously.
18Other non-medical applications
- In the Japanese prefecture of Wakayama (Osaka)
children will use RFID-labels for entering school
(2004). - TraceCare (Wiesbaden, Germany) offers devices
that allow to find the position of a person via
internet through a Global Positioning System
(GPS).
19Other non-medical applications
- The Bavarian company Ident Technology offers
tracking devices using the human body
(particularly the skin) as digital data
transmitter. See http//www.ident-technology.com
20Other non-medical applications
- Microsoft patent Number 6,754,472 June 22, 2004
concerns the human body as a medium for
transmission of data (or energy) to other
devices like PDAs, cellular phones, medical
devices, RFID, making possible to localize
persons. The patent does not describe any
specific device.
21Future personal tracking devices
- Integration and miniaturization of three
technologies www.digitalangel.com - Biosensor read a persons vital signs by
touching the skin (implanted into a wristwatch) - Pager device takes the data from the biosensor
by using a cellular packet module - Position location technology using radio signal
to stay in contact with a persons pager device - -gt this information is sent through cellular data
packets to a data centre (Digital Angel) - -gt The first Digital Angel was launched in
November 2001 - -gt Medical emergency purposes
- -gt Identification/Location purposes
22Legal Background
- Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- EU Charter of Fundamental Rights of 2000
- Convention on Human Rigts and Biomedicine of the
Council of Europe - EU Directives
- European Constitution, National Constitutions
- -gt providing that the human body and its parts
shall not give rise to financial gain (Principle
of human dignity)
23Ethical Aspects of ICT Implants
- Anthropological background
- The unity of biological and psychic
(intellectual, emotional) functions - The body and the environment
- Social aspects
- Creativity, cultural aspects
- Some characteristics of ICT devices
- Chips (silicon, bio-chips)
- algorithms
24Ethical Aspects of ICT Implants
- Fundamental ethical principles
- Human Dignity
- Privacy (data protection)
- Autonomy
- Confidentiality
- Ethical conflict(s) to reduce freedom and
autonomy vs. Increase health, security
25Ethical Aspects of ICT Implants
- In case of medical applications
- Prohibition of eugenic practices
- Respect of the informed consent of the patient
- Prohibition of making the human body and its
parts a source of financial gain
26Ethical Aspects of ICT Implants
- In case of non-medical applications
- Privacy and surveillance
- Exclusionary practices
- Practices of domination
- Practices of privacy invasion
- -gt How far will ICT Implants (and tags) enlarge
our individual and social choices and how far
will they create a situation of social
discrimination?
27Ethical Aspects of ICT Implants
- In case of enhancement(s)
- What does it mean to enhace human beings?
- What does perfectibility mean?
- Are ICT enhancements necessarily a new form of
racism? -gt the post-human debate - How clear is the distinction between therapeutic
applications and enhancements?
28Ethics and Public Policy Historical Roots
- The relation between ethics, law, and public
policy has a long tradition in Western thought
and practice going back to Platos Nomoi (722d)
where he stresses the importance of
introductions (proimia) that should used in
order to make laws more understandable and
acceptable to the citizens. Aristotle makes a
difference between individual and political
virtues. Political and legal practice are
supposed to rest on ethical counselling on the
basis of morality (ethos).
29Ethics and Public Policy Historical Roots
- Since Modernity, and particularly since Thomas
Hobbes, there is not just a difference but a
split between morality, law and public policy. - Since Hegel through Pierce and Rorty there is a
(pragmatic) search for overcoming it. - Todays mass media and particularly the internet
have created new forms of mediation without
eliminating the differences.
30Ethics and Public Policy Ethics Councils
- Ethics councils within the sphere of public
policy have the function of reflecting on the
moral and legal foundations of specific
controversial issues without being itself neither
a legal nor a moral authority. - Their task is reflection, not decision-making or
dogmatic proclamation.
31Ethics and Public Policy Ethics Councils
- They should counterbalance ethical arguments and
give an opinion on matters that remain
controversial and subject to revision. - Todays public policy has a need for such
counsels particularly with regard to new
developments in science and technology.
32Ethics and Public Policy Ethics Councils
- Of course, such ethics bodies are not
unproblematic not only concerning their
legitimating body in some cases it is the
parliament, in other cases the executive , but
also with regard to possible controversial
standpoints that may differ with present laws
and/or directives.
33Ethics and Public Policy Ethics Councils
- In other words, it is important that such bodies
are politically independent, pluralist, and
multidisciplinary and that they view themselves
not just as guarantee of an established morality
or of current law, but as a critical space where
an open debate on legally and morally
controversial issues can take place.
34Ethics and Public Policy Ethics Councils
- Although they might look for consensual opinions,
consensus should not be a conditio sine qua non
of their proposals. It is also not their function
to make public policy more moral, but to
encourage ethical reflection within the public
sphere.
35Ethics and Public Policy Ethics Councils
- Most European and non-European national and
international ethics committees have been created
in the nineties. - UNESCOs International Bioethics Committee (IBC)
was created in 1993. The Steering Committee on
Bioethics of the Council of Europe dates from
1992. - US President George W. Bush created The
Presidents Council on Bioethics on the basis of
the Executive Order 13237 from November 28, 2001
(http//www.bioethics.gov/). - Most national and international ethics committees
are in fact (until now) committees on bioethics.
The EGE is the first international committee with
a broader scope.
36Ethics and Public Policy Further Reading
- Rafael Capurro
- Ethics and Public Policy within a Digital
Environment. In I. Alvarez, T. W. Bynum, J.A. de
Assis Lopes, S. Rogerson (Eds.) The
Transformation of Organisations in the
Information Age Social and Ethical Implications,
ETHICOMP 2002, Lisboa 2002, 319-327. Online
http//www.capurro.de/ethicomp02.html - Ethics Between Law and Public Policy. In Journal
of International Biotechnology Laws (JIBL) Vol.
1, Issue 2 / 2004, 62-66.Online
http//www.degruyter.de/rs/280_7046_DEU_h.htm - Ethik in Europa zwischen Forschung und Politik.
In Wissenschaftszentrum Nordrhein-Westfalen ed.
Jahrbuch 2002/2003, 200-211. - Online http//www.capurro.de/wznrw.html
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