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Pioneer Planet
Published: Sunday, June 24, 2001
Heart association's backtracking muddies issue of stem-cell funding
AARON ZITNER  LOS ANGELES TIMES

WASHINGTON
As evidence mounted last year that embryo cells could be tweaked
in ways that might cure disease, the American Heart Association
decided to spend some of its own money to see whether the cells
could ease heart disease. No less would be expected from an
organization that exists largely to tame the nation's No. 1 killer.

Then came a flood of protest letters, including one from the
archbishop of St. Louis. In Missouri, an entire fund-raising
committee resigned, dropping its plans for a gala ball. Donors
who opposed abortion said they could not support the destruction
of human embryos.

So now, just as President Bush is deciding whether to invest
federal money in embryo-cell research, the nation's second-largest
patient advocacy group has gone silent. In fact, its board voted
last October not to fund the very research that it had endorsed
only four months earlier as full of promise.

The American Heart Association's reversal shows just how
uncertain the political waters have become as Bush readies
his decision on the research, which is expected in July. Like
the heart association, Bush must choose between the hope
that embryo research will save lives, and the fear that it will
alienate those donors and supporters who object to experiments
in which human embryos are destroyed.

Bush, in his limited public comments so far, has given every
indication that he will oppose federal funding for the research.
And yet some other abortion foes, when faced with a similar
choice, have backed patients over embryos. This month Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, broke with his anti-abortion allies and
urged Bush to support embryo-cell research, lauding its
potential to cure cancer, Alzheimer's disease and diabetes.

Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson,
an abortion opponent and former governor, argues that the
research is "very important."

Advocates for the research hope that these Republicans will
show Bush that he can safely support embryo-cell research
without alienating the conservative voters who helped him
reach the White House.

But at the same time, the American Heart Association stands
as the opposite example -- as a patient advocacy group that
will not advocate for the research. "This raises the question
whether this makes it easier for Bush to oppose embryo cell
research, because he can say the American people are unhappy
with it," said Alexander Capron, a professor of law and medicine
at the University of Southern California.

Several other disease advocacy groups are unhappy that the
heart association will not ask its force of volunteers -- more
than 4 million -- to lobby the White House to support federal
funding.

Groups devoted to juvenile diabetes, spinal cord injury,
Parkinson's disease and other ailments are leading a campaign
to persuade Bush to support the research. Like the heart
association, the American Cancer Society -- the nation's largest
patients' group by donations -- has not joined the coalition.

Research using embryos became an issue in November 1998,
when a University of Wisconsin researcher first isolated and
cultured a special type of cell, known as a stem cell, that arises
in embryos several days after sperm meets egg. As the embryo
grows, its stem cells give rise to every other type of cell, tissue
and organ in the body.

The discovery of embryonic stem cells immediately raised
hopes that doctors could one day learn to grow them into
replacement tissues for patients -- new brain cells for
Parkinson's patients, pancreas cells for diabetics and nerve
cells for people with spinal cord injuries. Many researchers
looked to fertility clinics as a source of embryos, as fertility
patients often create more embryos than they need when
trying to conceive children.

In the spring of 1999, the heart association formed a task force
to consider whether to fund stem cell research. As part of its
work, the task force surveyed not only the science but the
opinion of heart association leaders. It polled the 15 regional
affiliates, the 13 scientific councils and various other committees
that oversee the group's management and programs.

The reports that came back generally cheered supporters of
embryo cell research.

Scientists in the surveys thought the heart association should
fund stem cell research. The regional leaders were split by
geography. Those in the Northeast were fully supportive of
association funding, while those in the heartland thought the
group might pay a penalty in donations and volunteerism.

"We thought there would be some objections to the research,
but we hoped that it would not be severe," said David Livingston,
an executive vice president of the heart association. "We tried to
address the ethics in terms of saying that the research has great
value for humankind. We looked at the 100 (million) to 150 million
people who would benefit, 50 million with cardiovascular disease
and stroke."

In June of last year, the task force presented its report to the
43-member national board of directors, which voted to fund
embryo cell experiments, once ethical guidelines were completed
and approved.

But the task force had miscalculated. It had surveyed the
association at a time when stem cell research was not widely
debated or understood.

Shortly after the June vote, Pope John Paul II said that medical
techniques that destroy embryos are "not morally acceptable,
even when their proposed goal is good in itself." Senators
began debating the research, showing that people held widely
divergent views.

Regional affiliates of the association began reporting that
volunteers were threatening to quit. Corporate donors,
wary of controversy, suggested that they might also pull
out, Livingston said. Among the protest letters was one
from Archbishop Justin Rigali, who leads the Archdiocese
of St. Louis.

"I think that we became more educated about the differing
views and how strongly those views were held," Livingston
said. Reconsidering public opinion, officials made a new
damage assessment: Funding stem cell research would cut
donations by $9 million to $15 million in the first year and
by $45 million to $50 million the next. The association raised
$485 million last year.

http://www.pioneerplanet.com/news/nat_docs/70887.htm

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