“Even in New York, when they inspect, they’re looking at hygienic conditions not record-keeping,” said Arthur Caplan, a bioethics professor at New York University. “Nobody confirms that you have what you say you have.”
“It’s absurd that we have these materials so valuable that people pay to store them, but we run it like a 19th-century grocery,” he continued. “Cryopreservation has historically operated in a casual laissez-faire environment, where people were just supposed to trust.”
“Even in New York, when they inspect, they’re looking at hygienic conditions not record-keeping,” said Arthur Caplan, a bioethics professor at New York University. “Nobody confirms that you have what you say you have.”“It’s absurd that we have these materials so valuable that people pay to store them, but we run it like a 19th-century grocery,” he continued. “Cryopreservation has historically operated in a casual laissez-faire environment, where people were just supposed to trust.”
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