South Korea Cloning Experiment Proves Need for National/Global Ban
Chicago, Illinois -
February 12, 2004 -
South Korean scientists have reportedly created cloned human embryos
and obtained embryonic stem cells from them.
According to the researchers' report in today's issue of the
journal Science, sixteen women donated a total of 242 eggs for the
experiments. 30 cloned embryos reached the blastocyst stage where
embryonic stem cells can be obtained. Only one embryonic stem cell
line was established. To date, no therapies or treatments exist that
use such cells.
"Controversy continues to swirl around killing even
long-abandoned human embryos for research," said John F. Kilner,
Ph.D., President of The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity. "The
South Korean experiment disturbingly goes significantly further. It
produces human embryos for the explicit purpose of fatally mining
them to obtain bodily materials for experimental purposes. One does
not need to see human embryos as full-fledged persons to be deeply
troubled by such manipulation of human life."
The women who donated the eggs were unpaid and signed an informed
consent form that blocked them from benefiting from the research.
Each underwent a month-long fertility drug regimen designed to cause
the women to superovulate (or release many eggs at once). They then
underwent a surgical procedure to retrieve the eggs from the
reproductive tract.
Cloning research is impossible to do without exploiting women. It
should be banned immediately," said Daniel McConchie, Director of
Public Relations and Public Policy for The Center for Bioethics and
Human Dignity.
"Obtaining eggs from women is a difficult and sometimes dangerous
process, and cloning success is limited. Many scientists promote
cloning as a kind of 'fountain of youth' where diseases from
Alzheimer's to diabetes may be cured. If we are successful in
treating just one major disease using cloning methods, countless
women will need to donate their eggs to make the cure available to
all. Instead, we should focus on promoting promising research that
is not weighed down by ethical problems, human rights questions, and
limited viability."
Reporters: For Interviews
For reporters wanting
interviews with John F. Kilner or Daniel McConchie, please call The
Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity at 847-317-4097.
About The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity
The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity is a 501(c) 3 non-profit
think tank located in Chicago, Illinois. Its mission is to develop
reasoned perspectives on all of today's bioethical issues and to
disseminate them to health care professionals, academia, cultural and
church leaders, public policy makers, and the media in order to protect
human dignity. CBHD
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