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The Ethics Vacuum in Medical Technology: When Law Fails to Protect the Human Body -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Now the question is no longer whether medical technology will continue to develop– it most surely will. The real issue now is whether laws will or will not adapt to meet this reality. If they fail to do so (as they have time and again), the human body will be left wholly unprotected in the field of tech medicine–the very sector said to be saving us.

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Medical technology has done more than perhaps any other field to change the world we live in. In the modern world, artificial intelligence systems diagnose disease faster than human doctors. It seems that gene editing tools may soon wipe hereditary illness off the face of the earth. Wearable devices strapped to our bodies continuously monitor us in real time; they are now indispensable aiding clinical operations. But in fact, behind this narrative of progress stands a far less comfortable truth Medical technology is evolving faster than the systems of Thought and morality meant to govern it and the human body Is starting to pay a heavy price.

This is not just one more case of ‘regulatory lag’, as some might suspect.we are witnessing a deviation from the entire norm.

The law, which should serve as a shield for human dignity, finds itself an observer on the sidelines of global bio-experimentation. In many regions of the world, the legal framework remains broken, outdated, or deliberately misleading. This vacuum permits the acquisition and operation of patents granted to companies, research institutions, even governments who work in areas where innovation means rich rewards while responsibility can be discarded.

Take for instance the trend of AI assisted diagnosis. These systems are built upon gigantic data piles, usually without any genuine permission from the subjects whose medical details are used. The result is that we produce a contradiction: Technologies created to save lives are embedded in structures that may violate privacy, autonomy, and informed consent all core the first principles of modern medical ethics.

Even more disturbing is the increasing normality of bio surveillance. From genetic databases to perpetual biometric monitoring, the human body is being turned more and more into an object with no rights but plenty of data. This move transforms patients into products. Their biological knowledge becomes a commodity, traded analyzed, and mobilized with very limited visibility.

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That’s because the law hasn’t been kept up, not because it can’t be. It is just that no one made it do so. As long as a legal system takes no heed of harm before it happens, insofar as each individual case alone is concerned; then the whole thing become rather stuck and does not work so well as usual. However out-of-touch with reality that theory may seem now in view of recent developments which transcend traditional physical injuries (or for that matter assaults that leave no visible signs chiefly because they happen inside your head — again and again), all contemporary realities suggest that we are indeed experiencing such problems in three dimensions. A wrongly used set of genes is hardly likely to be “given back.” A prejudiced diagnostic program might quietly give the wrong answer to thousands before anyone notices. By the time law responds, damage is already embedded in this bodies and lives systems in which we live and move and have our being. This reactive style of legal structure is fundamentally at odds with the speed and scale of technical change. What we are now facing is not only a hole in regulatory systems, but also a moral vacuum. And vacuums know no more exist unoccupied than do other than force. When there is no strong regulation to circumscribe technology, power devolves to those rich enough to own it: multinational corporations, private labs, state entities. They have no evil intent as such; however, they operate in circumstances that drive efficiency, profit maximization, performance and control. Inevitably, without effective oversight these priorities shall all too often override ethical considerations. Its implications are already becoming clear. Experimental treatments are employed in loosely regulated environments; health care data is shared across borders in disregard of jurisdictional protections. AI decisions shape the course of people’s lives with no real lines of responsibility for them. And perhaps most dangerously, the name “innovation” is used to clamp a muzzle on critics: as if to question technology were the same thing as opposing

True progress is not measures by what technology is capable of, but whether it is allowed to be so. Now is the time for the world’s legal community to face this unpleasant reality: the existing frameworks are inadequate. Not piecemeal reforms, but a complete overhaul is called for. What is needed here is not only reactive regulation–which has rarely been effective in restraining any activity once it has gained widespread acceptance and taken firm hold owing both to human nature’s habit of trying till death persuades her otherwise but rather laws on internet that proactively govern the system from start to finish. In this model, human rights occupy center stage and technology is man’s instrument not afterthought.

It would mean requiring companies to conduct an ethics audit before doing any actual injury, not afterwards. It would mean globally enforceable standards of data protection that could not be evaded by jurisdictions through a back door. It means this big data system human body–that produces and does more than just happen to be us, should be respected not as if it were just a vital resource. There must be some degree of

Far and away the most important aspect of it will be redefining responsibility.In the event of an AI system making a wrong diagnosis into which wild apricots of crazy information are injected, who should bear responsibility for this? The designer? The hospital? The government that approved its use? Without clear answers, responsibility vanishes in the void–and the victim is helpless.

The stakes are enormous: biomedical technology does not merely affect how we live; it also changes what it means to be human. If not kept in check, it can reduce the body from an agent of rights and humane treatment to just an object for optimization, control, and harvest.

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A system which claims to heal yet at the same time undermines human dignity is not a system of progress. It is a system of deceit.

Now the question is no longer whether medical technology will continue to develop– it most surely will. The real issue now is whether laws will or will not adapt to meet this reality. If they fail to do so (as they have time and again), the human body will be left wholly unprotected in the field of tech medicine–the very sector said to be saving us.

Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Faculty of Law University 17 August 1945 Surabaya Indonesia

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