Featured News

Federal Grant Awarded for Embryo Adoption Awareness Campaign
The National Embryo Donation Center (NEDC) announced today that they are in a partnership with Baptist Health System which has just received two new cooperative agreements to promote public awareness of embryo donation and adoption.

Articles

Federal Grant Awarded for Embryo Adoption Awareness Campaign

Embryos Made to Order

Misleading, or an Inconvenient Truth

Women's Risk is Issue in Missouri Stem Cell Debate

Never Enough on Stem Cells

Souls on Ice

400K and counting

How embryo adoption is saving lives

New Embryo Donation Center Will Save Lives, Offer Ethical Choices

Evangelicals and embryo adoption

Frozen Out -- What to do with those extra embryos

Federal Grant Helps Promote Embryo Adoption

NEDC, was an exhibitor at the North American Council on Adoptable Children

CBS Accused of Giving Embryo Adoption Short Shrift

The Vests, who were in Washington to attend a speech by President Bush on embryo adoption, talk about their embryo adoption

Ban fresh embryo donations, ethics adviser insist

Ethical Alternatives

Texas firm first to offer ready-made embryos

The dilemma of 'designer' babies

Stem Cells Discovered in Amniotic Fluid

Parents facing hard decisions don't need unwanted advice

NNPR Series Examines Use, Ethics Of Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis For Embryonic Disease Screening, Sex Selection

Embryos for sale - A new angle in bioethical debate

Controversial Embryo Bank Lets Would-Be Parents Choose Traits of Children

Congress Will Take Up Embryonic Stem Cell Research Bill Next Week

Baby from embryo rescued after Katrina due this month

 

 

Never Enough on Stem Cells

Scientists should stop trying to appease religious conservatives about research those critics will never support.

Published in the L.A. Times
August 24, 2006

SCIENCE TOOK AN UNNECESSARY leap forward Wednesday. A Bay Area biotechnology company announced a breakthrough in stem cell research that could quell religious objections to such research and persuade the federal government to lift its restrictions on funding it. It's an impressive advance, but scientists - and society - would be better off if they could spend more time searching for ways to cure some of humankind's most debilitating diseases and less time trying to satisfy the demands of politics.

The biotech firm, Advanced Cell Technology, says it has found a way to create embryonic stem cells without destroying or damaging early-stage embryos, which is what many social conservatives object to. Yet those critics hardly seem satisfied with the new approach: The very word "embryonic" raises new objections from those who seek extraordinary and sometimes irrational restraints on stem cell research.

The technique developed by Advanced Cell Technology would work with fertilized eggs when they have divided into eight cells. One cell is then removed - something that's already done for genetic testing during in vitro fertilization; the other seven cells would remain a viable embryo. The harvested cell could be used for both stem cell research and genetic testing.

What could possibly be the objection? The National Catholic Bioethics Center has two, for starters. One is that the extracted cell has the potential to develop into an embryo. Never mind that those extracted cells aren't now developed into embryos when extracted for genetic testing or other uses.

The other is that the embryo is undergoing a medical procedure - the extraction of one cell - not for its own benefit but for the cause of science. If the cell can also be used for genetic testing, however, it is being used for that embryo's benefit. And even if it is not, there are many other procedures - organ donation, for example - that do not benefit the host but are nonetheless viewed not only as acceptable but as moral.

The Catholic Bioethics Center, at least, offers more than objections, outlining a scenario under which stem cell research is acceptable. It involves the cloning of adult cells, then using genetic technology to tinker with the cell's nucleus so it has the potential to create embryonic-type stem cells that have no chance of being an embryo. Japanese scientists are working on similar research. But not all stem cell research opponents find this technique acceptable, if it ever proves feasible.

Laboratory advances that make stem cell research politically popular are welcome. But as Advanced Cell Technology has demonstrated, scientists have already gone to great lengths to answer political objections to their work. It's more important to focus stem cell research on saving lives, not on appeasing a minority of religious conservatives.

 

 

 

News Headlines & Information - Family Album - Info & Downloads

Southeastern Fertility Center - Baptist Hospital for Women, Knoxville, TN
Phone: 866-585-8549 - E-mail: use our Contact form


Endorsed by the CMA