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Truth
is powerful and inbodies those who seek it with an open mind. |
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Human
Embryos Created For Research Purposes Only |
Source:
Ottawa
(Canada) Citizen
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Date
October
25, 2000 |
San Diego, CA -- U.S. scientists have created human
embryos for the sole purpose of research, a controversial
move critics say will lead to researchers creating human
embryos just to later destroy them. Researchers from
the Jones Institute for Reproductive Medicine in Virginia
used eggs and sperm donated from young, healthy donors
to create 40 embryos. The researchers then retrieved
human embryonic stem cells -- cells that are capable
of growing into virtually any cell, tissue or organ
in the human body. Their work was revealed yesterday
at the largest gathering ever of international experts
in reproductive medicine. It is believed to be the first
published study in the U.S. of scientists creating embryos
outside the human body for the sole purpose of harvesting
stem cells. The research is controversial because the
cells have to be harvested from human embryos and critics
worry it will open the door to human cloning. Pro-life
groups also oppose using unborn children for research
purposes -- especially when alternatives may well be
available. Two months ago, President Clinton unveiled
new guidelines allowing scientists to conduct federally
funded research on human embryonic stem cells, but only
if they use embryos left over from in-vitro fertilization
attempts for couples undergoing assisted reproduction
that normally would have been killed anyway. However,
the rules will not apply to privately funded research.
But scientists around the world are now saying they
can no longer rely just on leftover embryos because
of the speed at which stem cell research is moving.
In addition, fertility clinics are moving toward limiting
the number of embryos they create during each attempt
at IVF because of growing concerns about multiple pregnancies.
There are no Canadian laws dealing with issues of embryonic
research. In 1997 the Liberals allowed Bill C47, which
would have included restrictions on embryo research,
to die on the order paper. Canada has only a voluntary
moratorium in place, though it doesn't cover research
on human embryos. Britain allows scientists to create
embryos for research, but a spokesman for the country's
Human Fertilization and Embryology Authority said yesterday
that most researchers rely on donated embryos from IVF
patients because of a severe shortage of donor eggs.
He was aware of only one research project that's attempting
to retrieve stem cells from embryos created with donor
eggs and sperm. Ethicists say creating embryos just
for research raises huge social and ethical questions
about respect for the transmission of human life. "To
transmit human life for no purpose other than its intentional
destruction, we have to ask, 'Are we ethically justified
in doing that?' " said Margaret Somerville, of McGill
University's Centre for Medicine, Ethics and Law. She
said actually creating embryos for research and then
destroying them "is a failure to show respect for human
life." "And the question comes up: What is the ethical
number of embryos to create?" The Virginia researchers
said they created embryos using donor eggs and donor
sperm for two reasons: To get research material from
young, healthy, consenting donors and to use embryos
that were never created with the intention of a pregnancy.
They retrieved 162 mature eggs from 12 young women.
The eggs were then fertilized with frozen sperm. Sixty-eight
per cent fertilized, and half of those developed into
a blastocyst, a five-day old embryo. From 40 embryos,
the researchers were able to retrieve three stem cell
lines. The researchers said many ethical issues were
considered before the study, which first had to be approved
by the East Virginia Medical School's Institutional
Review Board. They also said both the egg and sperm
donors fully understood the nature and purpose of the
research before they agreed to participate. |
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