This concept is especially relevant for issues related to healthcare and professionals. Technology is outpacing and challenging a variety of ethical issues related to stem cells, genetic engineering, cloning, and euthanasia. Hospitals recognize the complexities of these ethical issues and assemble on-staff ethics teams made up of physicians, nurses, community members, bioethicists, social workers, chaplains, and legal experts to grapple with the dilemmas. Consider the possibility of genetically modified babies or “designer babies.” With the recent Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRSPR) technology, which is a new genome editing tool that allows scientists to snip and cut DNA, designer babies are no longer in the realm of science fiction, but now a reality. What are the ethical considerations of creating a child that is incredibly intelligent, attractive, athletic, and immune from a variety of diseases? What responsibilities do science and medical professionals have in determining how babies are genetically modified? Once the technology is “out of the box,” it will be difficult to put it back in. Take, for example, the introduction of in vitro fertilization (IVF) 40 years ago and consider the ethical debates that took place around the world. Today, there are 5 million IVF babies that have been born. In 50 years, will there have been 5 million designer babies born? How will this impact society if the cost of a designer baby is affordable to only the top one-percent of income? There are many social, religious, economic, and cultural implications due to the new CRSPR technologies that will have to be addressed and you will be part of the conversation as you start your health profession career.