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75 Percent of Americans Support Call For More Stem Cell Research
Posted By: News-Medical in Medical Research News
Published: Tuesday, 27-Jul-2004

Public backing for stem cell research is neither a Republican nor Democratic issue
and, as such, should not be turned into a political football during the 2004 elections,
according to Civil Society Institute (CSI) President Pam Solo.

She cautioned that any politicizing of stem cell research ignores the fact that there
is deep, bipartisan support for this avenue to explore possible new medical
advances.

On June 11, 2004, the nonprofit and nonpartisan Results For America (a project of
CSI) released a national opinion survey showing that, by a decisive margin of 74-21
percent, the vast majority of Americans support former First Lady Nancy Reagan’s
call for the Bush White House to lift restrictions on stem cell research in order to
look for possible treatments for the Alzheimer’s disease that afflicted former
President Ronald Reagan prior to his recent death, as well as the other grave
illnesses – including diabetes, Parkinson’s, heart disease and multiple sclerosis.

Solo said: “The death of Ronald Reagan altered the course of the national dialogue
about stem cell research. When almost three out of four Americans say that they
now are more likely to support stem cell research, what you are witnessing is a
fundamental shift in the way that average Americans think about this issue. It would
be a shame and a potentially devastating setback for the progress made in support
for stem cell research if it becomes some sort of litmus test for political parties
during the 2004 elections.”

At the time of the survey release, Opinion Research Corporation (ORC) Senior
Research Manager Wayne Russum said: “What you see here is really about as
close to bipartisan and panreligious agreement as you can get in American today
on any topic.”

Other key findings from the June 2004 ORC survey conducted on behalf of Results
For America included:
Overall support for stem cell research is continuing its steady pattern of growth.
When asked for their initial views with no prompting of medical research that “uses
stem cells from human embryos,” Americans supported it by a margin of 60 percent-
26 percent. This reflects major growth in support from an earlier 2001 survey that
asked the same question and found a support level of 48-43 percent.
Support for stem cell research is rapidly approaching bipartisan status. The initial
question posed about "embryonic stem cell research" found strong majority support
among liberals (75 percent) and moderates (67 percent), with conservatives (47
percent) hovering just under the majority level. When the potential benefits of stem
cell research were explained in a separate question to those polled, the overall
support level rose to 72 percent-23 percent, including backing from moderates at 81
percent and conservatives at 60 percent.
Nearly three in four Americans back expanded federal support for stem cell
research. A strong 74 percent of those polled expressed their backing for more
resources for stem cell research, including 80 percent of moderates and 62 percent
of conservatives. Moderates lined up for additional stem cell research by a margin
of 80 percent-17 percent, while conservatives supported the proposition by a
margin of 62 percent-32 percent.

In August 2001, the Bush administration imposed a major new restriction on federal
funding for embryonic stem cell research. The restriction meant that research on
stem cell lines created before August 2001 could receive funding, but prohibited
support for research on stem cell lines developed after that date.

Full survey findings are available online at http://www.ResultsForAmerica.org

SOURCE: News-Medical in Medical Research News
http://www.news-medical.net/?id=3594

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