Ethics of bioprinting is a sub-field of ethics concerning bioprinting. Some of the ethical issues surrounding bioprinting include equal access to treatment, clinical safety complications, and the enhancement of human body (Dodds 2015).[1][2]
3D printing was invented by Charles Hull in the mid-1980s.[3] 3D printing is a process in additive manufacturing which uses a digital design to produce a physical copy. This process is carried out by a specific printer, which uses several layers in order to complete the design. However, bioprinting uses the ways of 3D printing to create things such as organs, tissues, cells, blood vessels, prosthetics and a broad range of other things that can be used in the medical field.[4][5][6] The ethics of bioprinting have been a topic of discussion as long as bioprinting has been popular. Ethics are moral principles that govern production, behavior, etc.[7]
^Dodds, Susan (11 February 2015). "3D printing raises ethical issues in medicine". ABC Science.
^Williams, Rhiannon (29 January 2014). "3D printing human tissue and organs to 'spark ethics debate'". The Telegraph.
^"What is 3D Printing? The definitive guide". 3D Hubs. Retrieved 2018-05-06.
^"What is Bioprinting?". www.innovateus.net. Retrieved 2018-05-06.
Ethicsofbioprinting is a sub-field ofethics concerning bioprinting. Some of the ethical issues surrounding bioprinting include equal access to treatment...
tissue engineering fields. 3D bioprinting covers a broad range ofbioprinting techniques and biomaterials. Currently, bioprinting can be used to print tissue...
Wenmiao (2017-09-01). "3D bioprint me: a socioethical view ofbioprinting human organs and tissues". Journal of Medical Ethics. 43 (9): 618–624. doi:10...
nanomedicine, and 3D bioprinting. Variants of human genetic engineering with so far limited usage include the artificial creation of human-animal hybrids...
ensure the ethical use of biotechnology in tissue transplantation. Tissue engineering, like 3D bioprinting, is an emerging field of study about constructing...
one long-term goal of 3D bioprinting technology is to reconstruct an entire organ as well as minimize the problem of the lack of organs for transplantation...
like simulated reality, artificial intelligence, superintelligence, 3D bioprinting, mind uploading, chemical brain preservation and cryonics. They believe...
to remake many of the tissues in the body through the use of modern techniques such as microfabrication and three-dimensional bioprinting in conjunction...
process of building certain objects. It is having a rapid growth in the prosthesis, medical implants, novel drug formulations and the bioprintingof human...
bioprinting solutions and Aleph Farms that used additive manufacturing to structure turkey cells on the International Space Station. 3D bioprinting has...
company utilizes its NovoGen MMX Bioprinter for 3D bioprinting. Organovo anticipates that the bioprintingof human tissues will accelerate the preclinical...
MRI-guided insightec focused ultrasound machines, 3D printing lab and bioprinting facilities, CT imaging core, human metabolism research facilities, electron...
Ashiqin (January 12, 2022). "The Patent Eligibility of 3D Bioprinting: Towards a New Version of Living Inventions' Patentability". Biomolecules. 12 (1):...
Lambrichts, I (18 March 2024). "From Pluripotent Stem Cells to Organoids and Bioprinting: Recent Advances in Dental Epithelium and Ameloblast Models to Study...
Retrieved 2022-03-17. Gellerman, Bruce (November 22, 2017). "How 3D Bioprinting Could Revolutionize Organ Replacement". www.wbur.org. Retrieved 2022-03-17...
project, "Zero-Gravity 3D Bioprintingof Super-Soft Materials," with Alex Czekanski, Tara Haas, and Roxanne Mykitiuk. "People of YorkU". peopleofyu.yorku...