The
Bioethics Monthly
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Featured
Resource of the Month —
David P. Gushee, PhD, Professor of Christian
Ethics at Mercer University, gives an update on
his current research entitled, "The
Sanctity of Life: Rethinking Eternal Truths in a
New Political Era."
Podcast
Also This Week — Extending Life Conference Promotional
The first 10 people to
register for
the conference and mention this weekly email
will receive a free copy of
Aging, Death, & the Quest for Immortality. |
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Quote of the Month —
"The noble Lord also
said that the campaign for responsible
fatherhood was lost a couple of generations ago.
If that is true, then let us fight the campaign
again and win it. Let us not simply say, 'It’s
gone, it’s lost, forget it, it’s a new world.'
The noble Lord also said that science could
change ethics. No, my Lords, science cannot
change ethics. Ethics are ethics, morals are
morals. What is right is right, what is wrong is
wrong, and science cannot change that. If that
were so, we would be living in a morass, in a
world of moral relativism. If there is one thing
that is going wrong in the world at the moment,
it is that we are losing sight of the
immutability of certain rights and wrongs and
ethics."
—
Lord Norman Tebbit is a former Conservative
party chairman, secretary of state in Margaret
Thatcher’s governments and now sits in the House
of Lords as Baron Tebbit of Chingford.
Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill, January
21, 2008.
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Center Conferencing
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 Planning to attend the Extending Life:
Setting the Agenda for the Ethics of Aging, Death, and Immortality
conference or pre-conference Institutes, hosted by The Center for
Bioethics & Human Dignity, March 3-8, 2008? Why not maximize your experience by
attending it for academic credit?
The preconference institutes and the
conference will be available for graduate and undergraduate level credit.
Institute instructors include William Cheshire, MD; C. Ben Mitchell,
PhD; Robert Orr, MD; Joyce Shelton, PhD; and Michael Sleasman, PhD.
Conference wrap-around instructors include Dennis Hollinger, PhD (graduate
level) and Joyce Shelton, PhD (undergraduate level).
Hours can be credited toward degree
programs at Trinity International University (relocation to Trinity is not
required) or can be transferred to other institutions.
Seize this opportunity, call
888.246.3844 to obtain a syllabus or more information. |
CBHD
Membership
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Are you a Member of CBHD?
Would you like to become one?
Annual membership with the Center includes a
subscription to Dignitas (the Center's
quarterly newsletter) and Ethics & Medicine: An
International Journal of Bioethics, as well as
discounted registration for all Center conferences.
If your membership has recently lapsed or you would
like to become a member, please visit our website
at:
http://www.cbhd.org/membership/. |
Happenings
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Summer Internships with NIH
The Office of Biotechnology Activities at the
National Institutes of Health is accepting
applications for paid summer internships for
students interested in gaining hands-on policy
experience in a Federal government office in the
areas of biosecurity, gene transfer, genetic
technologies, and clinical research policy.
Applications will be accepted until March 1, 2008.
Stem Cells World Congress
February 12-13, 2008
Marriott San
Diego La Jolla
La Jolla, CA
Tel: 858/ 587-1414, email:
Mathias.Kuo@marriott.com
America's Broken Healthcare System
The 2008 International Bioethics Conference
February 21-22, 2008 at the
Hilton Hawaiian Village Beach Resort & Spa in
Honolulu, Hawaii
Emerging Problems in Neurogenomics: Ethical, Legal &
Policy Issues at the Intersection of Genomics &
Neuroscience
February 29, 2008
Cowles Auditorium, Hubert H. Humphrey Center
University of Minnesota
Medical Professionals Conference:
Balancing Faith, Family and Practice
April 10-12, 2008
A Focus on the Family Event
Tel: 800/ 232-6459, or download
Conference Brochure
5th International Symposium of the Definition of
Death Network
May 20-23, 2008
Plaza America Convention Center
Varadero Beach, Cuba
Emerging
Issues in Embryo Donation and Adoption
May 29-31, 2008
Marriot Crystal Gateway
Arlington, Virginia
ASBH 10th Annual Meeting-Future
Tense
The ASBH 10th Annual Meeting will take place
October 23-26, 2008 at the Cleveland Renaissance
Hotel in Cleveland, OH. TheCall for Proposals will
be open soon on the
ASBH Web site and will be open until March 1,
2008. The theme for the meeting is Future Tense. We
invite you to think about the many meanings one
might extrapolate from this term, for instance
looking ahead to the future of bioethics and the
medical humanities or what about bioethics and the
medical humanities may make the future tense or
uncertain or perhaps even looking back over the last
10 years to discuss the major issues and changes,
what was resolved and what might the future still
bring.
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News Highlights
January
2008
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Outsourced “Wombs-For-Rent” In India
Rising Trend Of Indian Surrogates Carrying
Babies For Infertile Women In U.S., Taiwan, Britain
(CBS
News)
A conversation with Story Landis, head of the NIH Stem Cell Task Force
In late November, two teams of scientists
announced that differentiated human cells can be
genetically engineered into a state, induced
pluripotency, mirroring that of embryonic stem
cells. Nature Reports Stem Cells spoke with Dr.
Story Landis, head of the Stem Cell Task Force at
the United States National Institutes of Health to
learn what’s next. (Nature)
The Year in Nanotech
Better batteries and supersticky glues are on
the horizon. (Technology
Review) |
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China Offers Unproven Medical Treatments
They’re paralyzed from diving accidents and car
crashes, disabled by Parkinson’s, or blind. With few
options available at home in America, they search
the Internet for experimental treatments — and often
land on Web sites promoting stem cell treatments in
China. (Associated
Press)
Medicare Drug Plan Fuels Health-Care Spending
The new Medicare prescription drug plan was
largely responsible for an 18.7 percent increase in
Medicare spending in 2006, which was double the
increase in spending from the year before, U.S.
health officials report. (HealthDay)
Stem cell breakthrough leaves embryos unharmed
For the first time, human embryonic stem cells
have been obtained without having to destroy the
embryos they came from.
The breakthrough sidesteps the
primary ethical objection to human embryonic stem
cell (hESC) research – that embryos must perish to
yield up hESCs. (New
Scientist)
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First bioartificial heart may signal end of organ shortage
The world’s first beating, retooled
“bioartificial heart” is described today in the
journal Nature Medicine by University of Minnesota
researchers in research that could pave the way to a
new treatment for the 22 million people worldwide
who live with heart failure.
The team took a whole heart and
removed cells from it. Then, with the resulting
architecture, chambers, valves and the blood vessel
structure intact, repopulated the structure with new
cells. (Telegraph)
UK: Green light for hybrid research
Regulators have given scientists the green light
to create human-animal embryos for research.
The Human Fertilisation and
Embryology Authority granted permission after a
consultation showed the public were “at ease” with
the idea. (BBC)
Hospital won’t remove disabled girl’s womb
A mother who provoked an ethical row when she
claimed she had persuaded doctors to remove her
disabled daughter’s womb said yesterday that the
backlash had made the hospital change its mind. (Telegraph) |
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Surgeons attempt to repair hearts with stem cell injections
British scientists have been given the go-ahead
to begin potentially ground-breaking experiments
using injections of stem cells to repair patients’
damaged hearts. The team hopes to repair the organs
of people who have suffered the most severe heart
attacks. (The
Guardian) 1,000 Genomes Project: Expanding the Map of Human Genetics
The number of
sequenced human genomes will soon swell to more
than 1,000 as part of a new international research
consortium’s effort to trace the potential genetic
origins of disease. But first the mother, father and
adult child of a European-ancestry family from Utah
and a Yoruba-ancestry family from Nigeria will join
an anonymous individual as well as famous
geneticists Craig Venter and James Watson as part of
the handful of humans to have on record
a complete readout of their roughly three billion
pairs of DNA. And these six will also each have
their genetic codes examined at least 20 times,
providing 10 times the accuracy of existing genetic
sequences as well as paving the way for the
ambitious effort dubbed the 1,000 Genomes Project,
which will comprehensively map humanity’s genetic
variation. (Scientific
American)
Scientists Create First Synthetic Bacterial Genome — Largest Chemically
Defined Structure Synthesized In The Lab
A team of 17 researchers at the J. Craig Venter
Institute (JCVI) has created the largest man-made
DNA structure by synthesizing and assembling the
582,970 base pair genome of a bacterium, Mycoplasma
genitalium JCVI-1.0. This work, published online
today in the journal Science by Dan Gibson, Ph.D.,
et al, is the second of three key steps toward the
team’s goal of creating a fully synthetic organism.
In the next step, which is ongoing at the JCVI, the
team will attempt to create a living bacterial cell
based entirely on the synthetically made genome. (Science
Daily)
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Flawed embryos seen as source for stem cells
From what is now considered medical waste might
be fashioned bio-treasure: stem cells able to form
into any of the body’s 220 cell types, including
blood, nerves, bone, and skin tissue, new research
suggests. (The
Boston Globe)
Death of the father: British scientists discover how to turn women’s bone
marrow into sperm
British scientists are ready to turn female bone
marrow into sperm, cutting men out of the process of
creating life.
The breakthrough paves the way for
lesbian couples to have children that are
biologically their own. (Daily
Mail)
The Great Kidney Bazaar
The unearthing of an illegal kidney trade in
Gurgaon, a Delhi suburb, could have hardly come as a
surprise since India has long been notorious for
being the ‘warehouse for kidneys’—a great kidney
bazaar. Even less surprising was the fact that the
alleged kingpin of this racket, a doctor with
various aliases who had earned crores of rupees
through unethical means, managed to escape when
police raided his ‘clinic’. The police find it
easier to catch the small time criminal, not the
affluent ones. (Asian
Tribune)
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Each week the top news stories, as determined by the staff at The Center for Bioethics
& Human Dignity are sent out via email.
[Note: News stories and events do not represent the Center's views. For additional commentary on many of the issues they raise, please see the CBHD web site at www.cbhd.org.]
Please visit
http://www.bioethics.com for daily
posts on bioethics news and issues.
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Copyright © 1994
- 2008 by The Center for Bioethics & Human
Dignity
The contents of this article do not necessarily reflect the opinions of
CBHD, its staff, board or supporters. Permission to reprint granted as long as The Center for Bioethics
&
Human Dignity and the web address for this article is referenced.
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