# Partial ectogestation and threats to the fetus: how healthcare professionals’ caution may reinforce the medicalization of pregnancy and childbirth

**Authors:** Victoria Adkins

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/jlb/lsaf023 · Journal of Law and the Biosciences · 2025-10-28

## TL;DR

Healthcare professionals in England are cautious about partial ectogestation, fearing it could medicalize pregnancy and childbirth further.

## Contribution

The study introduces healthcare professionals' perspectives on partial ectogestation and its potential to reinforce medicalization.

## Key findings

- Healthcare professionals express concern about partial ectogestation's risks and natural boundaries.
- Participants advocate for strict criteria and parameters for the technology's use.
- Despite endorsing a social model of pregnancy, medicalization remains evident in their views.

## Abstract

Partial ectogestation is being developed in a bid to improve the survival rates and health outcomes associated with prematurity, but limited empirical research has been conducted on the views of key stakeholders, particularly healthcare professionals, in relation to this technology. This paper explores healthcare professionals’ perspectives in England on the use and implementation of partial ectogestation, within the medicalized context of pregnancy and childbirth. Following an online survey, qualitative interviews were undertaken with 22 healthcare professionals who work closely with pregnant individuals and fetuses. Using a formula of the precautionary principle from environmental studies, the analysis presented illustrates healthcare professionals’ apprehension toward partial ectogestation. With the fetus who may come to be transferred to an artificial placenta device at the centre of their concerns, participants were cautious of the technology producing poor outcomes and pushing the boundaries of nature. In response to these threats, they encourage strict criteria and clear parameters around the use of the technology. While healthcare professionals appear to endorse a social model of pregnancy when it comes to partial ectogestation, echoes of medicalization persist through medical determinations of poor outcomes and the continued centralization of the fetus as a patient.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** prematurity (MESH:C536271)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12560763