Artificial wombs technologies could save extremely premature babies. But as human trials near, the implications go beyond medicine – it's also about control, equality, and what motherhood will mean in the future.
Breakdown
- Aquawomb mimics the human womb to help extremely premature babies survive 1m 1s
- The system uses artificial amniotic fluid and an external placenta for support 2m 36s
- Clinical trials for Aquawomb are at least five to six years away 3m 31s
- Experts warn artificial wombs may not solve social inequalities 5m 35s
- Societal debate is needed on who controls access to reproductive technology 5m 28s