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United Press International
March 19, 2003

Most Americans favor therapeutic cloning
By Steve Mitchell
UPI Medical Correspondent

WASHINGTON, March 19 (UPI) -- Nearly 70 percent of Americans favor
allowing therapeutic cloning or the production of cells that might
have the potential to treat disease and more than half want to ban
reproductive cloning, a new survey released Wednesday reveals.

The survey results came as the cloning debate heated up in the
Senate, with the Judiciary Committee conducting a hearing to examine
the difference between therapeutic and reproductive cloning.

The Senate has yet to vote on the cloning issue but members of the
House voted in February to ban both types of the procedure. Most
scientists think therapeutic cloning can lead to treatments for
various diseases, such as Parkinson's and diabetes, but it remains
controversial because it requires the destruction of a human embryo --
 a small ball of cells tinier than a grain of sand.

"This poll makes it clear that the majority of Americans want to see
this research proceed," Sean Tipton, spokesman for the Council for
the Advancement of Medical Research, told United Press International.
CAMR, comprised of university medical centers, scientific
organizations and patient groups, commissioned the poll.

"Unfortunately, it shows the House ignored public and expert
scientific opinion in their decision to prohibit it," Tipton added.

The poll, conducted by Opinion Research Corporation International,
surveyed more than 1,000 Americans and found 67 percent said they
favored Congress allowing research with therapeutic cloning to
continue. However, 55 percent said they opposed human reproductive
cloning. The poll, which produced results very similar to a separate
poll CAMR conducted last year, has a margin of error of plus or minus
3 percent, researchers said.

"The American public can and does make a distinction between
reproductive and therapeutic cloning," Tipton said. "They're
different things and the American public understand they're different
things."

Of those surveyed, 30 percent favored both reproductive and
therapeutic cloning and 12 percent did not want a ban on either one.

Pollsters found those with a college education were more likely to
favor therapeutic cloning. About 75 percent of those who had a
college degree favored the research, compared with 63 percent of
those with a high school degree.

Two competing cloning bills have been introduced in the Senate. One
bill, sponsored by Sam Brownback, R-Kan., would ban both types of
cloning. The other, co-sponsored by a bi- partisan group including
senators Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., would ban
reproductive cloning but allow therapeutic cloning research under
strict oversight and guidelines.

The poll "reflects what Senator Hatch has experienced personally when
he has talked to his constituents," a staffer in the senator's office
told UPI. "He's found the support is definitely out there for what
he's trying to do in his bill," the staffer said, noting Hatch has
received letters and phone calls from his pro-life constituents
signaling their support for therapeutic cloning.

The staffer said Hatch was confident his bill would pass in the
Senate.

Sen. Brownback's office did not return UPI's phone calls by
presstime.

SOURCE: Washington Times
http://washingtontimes.com/upi-breaking/20030319-034227-8045r.htm

SOURCE: UPI
http://www.upi.com/print.cfm?StoryID=20030319-034227-8045r

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