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Clinton approves embryo cell research

Thursday, 24 August, 2000, 06:18 GMT 07:18 UK - The United States
Government has released guidelines that will allow scientists to conduct
publicly funded research using cells taken from human embryos.

A government body, the National Institutes of Health, says that any work
must follow its ethical and legal guidelines.

Some scientists say the research, using special cells known as stem-cells,
has the potential to transform medicine, leading to treatments for diseases
which are incurable at present.

However the work is opposed by religious and anti-abortion groups which
consider it immoral.

Announcing the change, President Bill Clinton said: "We cannot walk away
from the potential to save lives and improve lives, to help people
literally get up and walk, to do all kinds of things we could never have
imagined".

He said his administration had reached its decision after reviewing the
extensive guidelines issued by the NIH.

Stem cells can be taken from human embryos and manipulated so that they
develop into other types of cells, such as muscle, nerve, heart and even
blood cells.

These special cells could also be grown into replacement organs and tissue.

The NIH says such research promises new treatments and possible cures for
many debilitating diseases and injuries, including Parkinson's disease,
diabetes, heart disease, multiple sclerosis, burns and spinal cord injuries.

Up to now, US law did not allow this kind of research to be publicly funded.

All applications for grants from the government will be considered by a
special stem cell review group, which is to be set up to ensure compliance
with the official guidelines.

These specify that scientists will be able to study only stem cells taken
from frozen embryos left over from in vitro fertilisation [fertilisation in
a test tube], when couples have conceived the children they wanted.

The rules also ban payment for embryos, so that people should not be
encouraged to create embryos specifically for research.

However critics argue that any research on embryos destroys human life.

Senator Sam Brownback from Kansas said: "It is never acceptable to
deliberately kill one innocent human being in order to help another".

Last week the British government said it was proposing legislation to cover
similar research on embryo cells.


Related to this story:
Experts support human cloning (16 Aug 00 | Sci/Tech)
Call for decision on human cloning (31 Jul 00 | Sci/Tech)
Row over human cloning plans (30 Jul 00 | Sci/Tech)
UK to 'approve therapeutic cloning' (03 Apr 00 | Sci/Tech)
Call for stem cell banks (01 Mar 00 | Sci/Tech)
Diabetes reversed in the lab (29 Feb 00 | Health)
Lab grows frog eyes (05 Jan 00 | Sci/Tech)
Stem cells top class of 1999 (17 Dec 99 | Sci/Tech)
Cell success has huge potential (07 Nov 98 | Sci/Tech)
'Revolution in a dish' (06 Nov 98 | Sci/Tech)


Internet links:
Chief Medical Officer's Expert Advisory Group on Therapeutic Cloning

BBC News Online: Sci/Tech
"http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/sci/tech/newsid_893000/893584.stm"

janet paterson
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