News, 28 August 2002
The British department of health has welcomed news that stem cells
extracted from thousands of human embryos are to be stored in the UK's
first national stem cell bank [see
yesterday's digest]. A spokesman for
the department said: "The cell bank will provide researchers with
accredited cell lines which have been ethically derived with proper
consent from donors." Couples who undergo IVF fertility treatment will
be asked to donate their spare embryos to the bank, which is being set
up by the Medical Research Council. [
The Times, 28 August] Dominic
Baster of SPUC said: "This development provides yet more proof that the
advent of IVF has led to a terrible commodification of human life.
Keeping surplus IVF embryos in frozen storage is unethical in the first
place, and the extraction of their stem cells can never be ethical
because it entails their destruction. Moreover, the parents have no
right to consent to their offspring being plundered and destroyed in
this way. Each and every embryo is a precious, individual human person."
The Australian prime minister has ordered an investigation into an
apparent attempt to mislead legislators about the potential benefits of
destructive embryonic stem cell research. Mr John Howard was responding
to revelations that video footage recommended to MPs by Professor Alan
Trounson, a prominent supporter of destructive embryo research, which
appeared to show a crippled rat making a recovery after receiving an
injection of embryonic stem cells was misleading. Professor Trounson has admitted that the rat
actually received cells taken from older aborted foetuses. Debate on the
bill to authorise embryonic research has now moved off the floor of the
House of Representatives to a parliamentary committee. [
News.com.au, 28
August]
A Catholic priest in the archdiocese of Detroit who claimed that
support for abortion was an authentically Catholic position has been
compelled to apologise by his archbishop, Cardinal Adam Maida. Fr Doc
Ortman began his apology in his parish bulletin by writing: "At the
request of Cardinal Maida, Bishop Kevin Britt [the local auxiliary
bishop] has asked that I write to allay the fears of some that I am less
than Catholic in my dedication to life." It is reported that Cardinal
Maida took the step after lay Catholics in Fr Ortman's parish took to
the streets in protest at his support for the pro-abortion stance of
Jennifer Granholm, a local politician who is said to be a Catholic and is standing in the election for state governor.
[
LifeSite, 27 August]
Members of a committee of the European parliament have attacked the
European Union's council of ministers for considering a moratorium on EU
funding of destructive embryonic research. The funding would have formed
part of the EU's sixth framework programme for research, but while the
programme itself has already been approved, the content of the specific
programmes to receive funding are the subject of qualified majority
votes in the EU's council of ministers. Some MEPs from the industry
committee, which originally drew up the Caudron report on which the
sixth framework programme is based, have accused the Council's Danish
presidency of violating a secret compromise which was agreed with the
European Commission to close the ethical debate regarding EU funding of
embryo research in order to leave the door open for the Commission to
stipulate which ethical guidelines should be followed in the future.
[SPUC Europe, 28 August]
Researchers in the US have shown that stroke patients can benefit
significantly from transplants of stem cells extracted from adult bone
marrow. A team at Oakland university in Michigan induced strokes in a
group of rats and then injected adult human stromal cells into three of
them. After 14 days the rats completed tests on their reflexes and motor
and sensory abilities 60% faster than in un-treated rats. [
BBC News
online, 27 August] Adult stem cell research continues to offer greater
potential for the treatment of disease than research on embryonic stem
cells.
To subscribe to SPUC's email information services, please visit www.spuc.org.uk/em-signup. The reliability of the news herein is dependent on that of the cited sources, which are paraphrased rather than quoted. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the society. © Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, 2012