For immediate release:
January 8, 2007
For more information:
Derrick Jones, 202.626.8825
mediarelations@nrlc.org
NATIONAL RIGHT TO LIFE APPLAUDS THE WORK OF
SCIENTISTS TOWARD
ETHICAL STEM CELL RESEARCH
WASHINGTON
– Just days
before the House of Representatives considers mandating federal
funding of stem cell research that destroys human embryos,
researchers at Wake Forest University announced the discovery of
stem cells in amniotic fluid. According to researchers, these
stem cells share important traits similar to stem cells obtained
from human embryos.
As was
reported in today's
Washington Post:
"They grow
fast, as fast as embryonic stem cells, and they show great pluripotentiality," meaning they can become many kinds of
tissues, said study leader Anthony Atala, director of the
Institute for Regenerative Medicine at Wake Forest University
School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, N.C. "But they remain
stable for years without forming tumors," he added, something
that embryonic cells are not very good at.
"We applaud the work of those researchers who continue to look
for ethical stem cell research alternatives that do not require
destroying human life, and we call on Congress to support such
ethical alternatives," said Douglas Johnson, NRLC
legislative director.
The House of
Representatives is scheduled to vote on January 11 on H.R. 3, a
bill which would mandate federal funding of research that
requires the killing of human embryos. H.R. 3 is identical to
H.R. 810, which was passed during the last Congress. President
Bush vetoed that bill – a veto sustained by the House on July
19, 2006.
"The government should not fund research that requires killing
living members of the species
Homo sapiens,"
Johnson said.
"To do so is
simply unethical."
There are many
types of stem cell research that are worthwhile and that do not
raise ethical objections. In addition to this new revelation,
stem cells can be obtained without killing human embryos, from
umbilical cord blood and from many types of "adult"
(non-embryonic) tissue.
Already,
humans with at least 72 different diseases and conditions have
received therapeutic benefit from treatment with such "adult"
stem cells. In contrast, embryonic stem cells have not been
tested in humans for any purpose because of the dangers
demonstrated in animal studies, including frequent formation of
tumors.
Additional
resources are available at the NRLC Human Embryos webpage at
www.nrlc.org/killing_embryos/index.html
and at
www.stemcellresearch.org.
The National Right to Life Committee is the nation's largest
pro-life group with affiliates in all 50 states and over 3,000
local chapters nationwide. National Right to Life works through
legislation and education to protect those threatened by
abortion, infanticide, euthanasia and assisted suicide.