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Stem cell experts say state funding not enough

Aug 4, 2006 - By Joanne Morrison
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Top embryonic stem cell scientists warned on Friday
that state and private funding, following President George W. Bush's veto of
a bill to expand federal funding and research, was not enough to keep the
United States at the forefront of research in the field.
Their comments came as scientists faced their fifth year working under
policy set by Bush that limits federally funded research to 78 existing
embryonic stem-cell lines, most of which are inadequate for research.
"Unfortunately, national policy has prevented the unfettered study in this
area," said John Gearhart of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, speaking
on a panel hosted by the Center for American Progress, the political think
tank headed by John Podesta, a former chief of staff to President Bill
Clinton.
"If this work had been funded robustly, we would be much further along in
our goals," Gearhart said, predicting advances could more likely take place
in other countries where there are fewer restrictions.
The human body has 220 types of cells. Eight years ago, scientists in
Wisconsin were the first to isolate and cultivate in a lab the one special
type of cell from embryonic tissue that is capable of forming all other
types of cells.
While scientists hope those cells one day can be used to cure a wide range
of diseases by essentially directing the human body to repair itself,
research has been caught up in a political cross-fire.
TOUGH OPPOSITION
Embryonic stem cell research is opposed by religious groups and some
conservative politicians because the research destroys human embryos.
Only a small fraction of funding at the federal government's National
Institutes of Health has been earmarked for human embryonic stem cell
research, just $38 million of NIH's $28.6 billion budget in fiscal 2006.
Just last month, Bush cast his first veto on a bipartisan bill to expand
embryonic research. "It crosses a moral boundary that our decent society
needs to respect," he said.

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