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 From:
 Scientific American

May 31, 2004

Stem Cells: A Way Forward

A new report provides some much-needed moral guidelines

By The Editors

Korean investigators have extracted stem cells from a cloned human
embryo. A Harvard biologist has developed 17 lines of human embryonic
stem cells that he is making freely available to the scientific
community. A ballot drive in California seeks to raise $3 billion for
similar science [see "The Stem Cell Challenge," by Robert Lanza and Nadia
Rosenthal].

Unquestionably, research on human embryonic stem cells is moving forward.
A conspicuously missing partner in that progress is the U.S. government.
In August 2001 President George W. Bush allowed the use of federal funds
for work on embryonic stem cells but only on those from sanctioned
samples. Those cells lines, far fewer than were promised, have many
limitations and may be unsuitable for future therapeutic applications.

As policy, the current rules are unsatisfying. The federal government
simultaneously encourages stem cell research and treats it as odious. It
has effectively ceded the tough moral decisions about work on embryos to
private interests, states and other countries--although it might reverse
course at any time. The federal funding restrictions present the illusion
of compromise, but they are really a fig leaf for befuddlement.

Making a bad situation worse, policies on embryonic stem cells are bound
up with the equally contentious debate over human cloning. The biomedical
community has repudiated reproductive cloning--the creation of
individuals who are genetic facsimiles. For some envisioned therapies, it
might nonetheless be useful to briefly create an embryonic clone of an
adult for the purpose of extracting stem cells. Investigators want this
kind of therapeutic cloning to be legal. Many people, however, oppose
human cloning in any form as unnatural. Because of legislative deadlock
over therapeutic cloning, the U.S. has left itself without the
reproductive cloning ban that everyone wants.

The stakes of dithering on these issues are high. If other countries jump
ahead of the U.S. in stem cell therapeutics--and several have declared
that intention--then both the biotechnology industry and patients will
suffer. American companies might lose billions in revenue. Our government
will have to decide whether to approve stem cell treatments developed
overseas and also whether to allow Medicaid and Medicare to pay for them.
Denying lifesaving treatments to the poor and elderly would be neither
ethical nor politically popular. Yet approving the treatments would be
morally inconsistent: the U.S. would be saying that it is wrong to
conduct the research but fine to benefit from it.

If the administration has been looking for moral guidance out of this
quandary, some can be found in "Reproduction and Responsibility," a
report issued in March by the President's Council on Bioethics (available
at www.bioethics.gov). Among other reforms, the council recommends that
reproductive cloning be strictly banned, along with any other techniques
for human procreation except by the fusion of human egg and sperm. It
also urges that experiments on human embryos should be acceptable if the
embryos are not maintained past a very early stage of development (no
more than 14 days, for example). Those guidelines would neatly separate
reproductive and therapeutic cloning while allowing investigators to
collect the needed stem cells.

We hope that President Bush will take those recommendations to heart and
support appropriate legislation to enact them. The government needs to
commit to more meaningful policies on this research. The report's
proposals are the best ones on the table.

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