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Sent: Tuesday, October 19, 2004 10:59 AM
Subject: Urgent Op-Ed by Lanza and Rohm



Op-Ed

Stem Cell 911

By Robert Lanza and Wendy Goldman Rohm

In an unprecedented move, The Royal Society --Britain's National
Academy of Science--this week asked the United Nations to ignore
President Bush's call for a ban on all forms of human cloning
including stem-cell research.
What hangs in the balance, on the cusp of the UN vote and the
upcoming Presidential election, is not only the plight of millions of
patients, but the future of one of the greatest medical advances in
the 21st century.
It is alarming that the US policy being pushed by the
Bush administration is not in sync with either public opinion
(a recent Harris poll shows that 6 out of 7 Americans fully
support all forms of stem cell research), or the expert opinions of
thousands of scientists and scores of Nobel laureates in the U.S.
and worldwide. The President has also ignored the
recommendations of the most renowned scientific
and medical groups in the country, the American Medical
Association, the National Academy of Science, and the American
Association for the Advancement of Science.
Indeed, the President's ideological blinders seem to have put him
in the same factual vacuum he found himself in at the start of the Iraq
war: then and now, he refuses to look at the facts in an objective/scientific
fashion.
Just a few months ago, even our new US ambassador to the United
Nations, John Danforth, called a press conference in support of therapeutic
cloning and the urgent need for this research. Now, like NIH chief Elias Zerhouni,
Danforth appears to have had the Bush policy shoved down his throat and must
promote the Bush position to the UN that neither represents the scientific facts
nor public opinion.
In the U.S., President Bush's habit of mixing personal religious beliefs
with public policy has slowly and subtly eroded the line between church
and state. This is inappropriate and damaging to human well-being and
public health. If the Bush administration succeeds in extending this to
the world via a UN ban, it will be a sad day indeed.
Bush's policies in the area of scientific research are as damaging to
the public interest as his foreign policies have been to the state of
international peace.
In the American arena, a careful look at the record will show that
a scientific and factual view of the world has rarely been incorporated
into decision-making by this President. Earlier this year, 5,000 scientists
(including 48 Nobel laureates) spoke out in support of embryonic stem cells
research and human cloning, and expressed outrage at the Bush administration's
habit of distorting science.
When Laura and George W. Bush state that embryonic stem cell research
holds no near-term promise for helping patients with debilitating diseases,
scientists on the front lines know that they are flat out wrong. With adequate
funding, we can see the first therapies within the next five years. The scientific
results so far speak for themselves. In animals, embryonic stem cells already
have reversed diabetes and fixed damaged hearts. Nerve cells have been used
to treat Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis and to restore function to paralyzed rats.
Stem cell scientists worldwide have no interest in destroying lives. They obtain stem
cells from tiny balls of cells left over in in-vitro fertilization clinics. Some 400,000 of these
are either discarded or frozen in the U.S. alone.
It is puzzling to us that the President believes the potential life of a group of
cells-smaller than a grain of sand-is more valuable, say, than the life of a
living, feeling, 5-year-old with a life-threatening disease.
Leading Republicans like Senator Orrin Hatch are similarly puzzled.
They believe an embryo only has the potential for life when it is a fetus in woman's
womb, not a ball of cells in a test tube. The question is whether a microscopic
ball of cells warrants the same rights as a parent or a spouse suffering from
Alzheimer's disease, or a young diabetic child who may go blind or have limbs
amputated.
Even a generous private sector will be hard pressed to fill the government's
role. Overcoming the scientific challenges that remain will require a large and
sustained investment in this research. The government is the only realistic
source for such an infusion of funds, and remains the greatest hope for moving
embryonic stem cell research into the clinic in the next five to ten years.
Without this support, research progress will be substantially delayed, and many
scientists and companies may be driven overseas, to the UK, Singapore, South Korea,
Israel, and many others, where stem cell research is more fully supported by government.
Bush's dangerously flawed policy in the US should not be allowed on the world stage,
where it will severely dampen efforts underway worldwide to relieve human suffering and
disease with emerging stem cell therapies. Moreover, it should be overturned in the US;
time is of the essence for millions of patients.

--Robert Lanza, MD, editor in chief of "Handbook of Stem Cells," is medical director
at Advanced Cell Technology. Wendy Goldman Rohm is author of "The Eighth Day:
On the Front Lines of Stem Cell Research and The Countdown to a Human Clone,"
Random House (Harmony Books).

------------
Please circulate freely

Editors, for editing questions,
contact: Wendy Goldman Rohm 847-942-9534, [log in to unmask]
or Robert Lanza at [log in to unmask]

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