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Stem Cell Now - book review

Stem Cell Now, From the Experiment That Shook the World to the New Politics
of Life by Christopher Thomas Scott is one of those books that should be
required reading by anyone who will be called upon to vote on the subject of
stem cell research and practices. It is scientific, level-headed, fair,
balanced, and extremely informative. It is written in a way that is easy for
laymen to understand. It presents a short but complete history leading up to
the current situation and it details where we're going depending on the
choices that are being made right now.

Scott gives a glowing picture of all the might be possible with stem cell
therapies and tried to place the possibilities in a time context that is
realistic even though both doctors and patients don't really want to hear
that side. We want cures and we want them now. He also describes the
failures and the side effects. But all these are routine, like polio and
smallpox.

The real issue for stem cell therapy is that it treads on religious issues
and causes people to scream ethics when they really mean religion. Some
religions dictate that 8-celled blastocysts be treated with the same
reverence as children or adults who have Parkinson's or diabetes. Others
demand that everything be done to cure diseases. Under some proposed
legislation doctors and even patients who use stem cell therapy may be
criminalized for using the best that science has to offer. And a whole
generation of Americans may find out what it's like to be a developing
nation as far as stem cell therapy is concerned as our biologist simply move
to countries and institutions where research may be not only funded but
legal.

Scott makes it clear - there will be stem cell research, embryonic stem cell
research, and there will be major breakthroughs. The horse has left the barn
and money will follow success. The question is only how soon and whether
America will be a part of the success.

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