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From waste to (fool’s) gold: promissory and profit values of cord blood

  • Biobanking Eggs and Embryos for Research
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Do anything but throw it [i.e. cord blood] out. (Private Bank Laboratory Director)

Abstract

According to biomedical discourse, cord blood has been transformed from ‘waste’ to ‘clinical gold’ because of its potential for use in treatments. Private cord blood banks deploy clinical discourse to market their services to prospective parents, encouraging them to pay to bank cord blood as a form of ‘biological insurance’ to ensure their child’s future health. Social scientists have examined new forms of (bio)value produced in biological materials emergent with contemporary biotechnologies. This paper contributes to this literature by examining the social and technical production of value in cord blood units collected for private banking. Value, in this paper is defined as a socio-cultural concept in which an object is made meaningful, or valuable, through its relations with social actors and within specific regimes of value. I draw on in-depth interviews with women who banked cord blood and key informants in private banks in Canada, to analyze how social actors produced cord blood as a valuable biological object. I show that a cord blood unit holds promissory value for women who bank and profit value for private banks and that these values are folded into each other and the biological material itself. Analyzing how specific cord blood units are made valuable provides insight into the multiple and possibly competing values of biological materials and the tensions that may arise between social actors and forms of knowledge during the valuing process.

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Notes

  1. Many thanks to the participants in this study who generously shared their time and expertise. The author would also like to thank the organizers and participants of the Biobanking Eggs and Embryos for Research workshop held at Dalhousie University (Halifax, NS, Canada) for the opportunity to present this work and for the insightful discussion. This paper was strengthened by comments and feedback from the anonymous reviewers and editors, Lorna Weir, Kean Birch, and Kelly Holloway. Funding for this research was provided by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Doctoral Fellowship.

  2. For a feminist critique of the promotion of social egg freezing, see (Cattapan et al. 2014).

  3. Kent et al. (2006) examine autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI), a procedure used to repair damaged tissue such as knee cartilage by transplanting to the damaged area healthy tissue that has been expanded through tissue engineering techniques, and argue that biovalue can be produced through inter-corporeal circulation. Biovalue, they suggest, is produced not only through the exchange of body parts through extra-corporeal circulation—that is, from one body to another—but also through movement of body parts within one body.

  4. Birch and Tyfield (2012) argue that concepts such as biovalue and biocapital fetishize the biological; that is, erase the labour and social relations necessary for the production of (bio)value and (bio)capital. Rather than examining human labour (material and immaterial) involved in the production of biovalue, they argue that scholars often apply these concepts in a way that suggests that they are inherent qualities in biological materials.

  5. In the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), women can talk to their midwives and/or physicians about delaying cord clamping after birth. At least one hospital in the GTA has developed a policy of delaying cord clamping for 45 s after birth for all non-emergency births.

  6. See Fannin (2013) for a discussion of the hoarding economy of private tissue banks.

  7. In Canada, the initial processing fee for private cord blood banking costs $860–1125 with annual storage fees ranging from $110–125.

  8. For a qualitative study of the perspectives of women who bank in a public bank, see (Busby 2010).

  9. Two of the four public banks are much smaller divisions of private banks. One public bank is in Quebec and only available to women giving birth in Quebec.

  10. http://www.insception.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Registration-Package.pdf, downloaded May 7, 2015.

  11. Clinicians have successfully used cord blood transplants to treat people over 110 lbs by pooling cord blood units, or using more than one cord blood unit (Gluckman 2009). This is possible with publicly banked cord blood units and less so with privately banked cord blood units.

  12. The AABB is an organization that offers an accreditation program for cord blood banks. AABB accreditation is voluntary and all private cord blood banks in Canada have this accreditation (http://www.aabb.org/sa/Pages/default.aspx, downloaded Nov. 5, 2014).

  13. In Canada, the largest private cord blood bank has approximately 39,000 units stored and only 12 have been released for use (Weeks 2012).

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Haw, J. From waste to (fool’s) gold: promissory and profit values of cord blood. Monash Bioeth. Rev. 33, 325–339 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40592-015-0048-5

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