"Designer Children" Experiments Dehumanizing
Chicago, Illinois -
May 4, 2004 -
The latest
edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association is
reporting a "designer children" experiment where nine couples
attempted to create children genetically-matched to sick donor
siblings.
In the
experiments done at Chicago's Reproductive Genetics Institute,
researchers created 199 embryos by in vitro fertilization and found
that 45 embryos were a suitable match for a potential stem cell
transplant using either umbilical cord blood or bone marrow. Of the
45, 28 were implanted and five born alive. The embryos that were not
a tissue match were either discarded or subjected to research that
killed them.
John
Kilner, President of The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity and
recently returned from a meeting in South Korea with cloning and
embryonic stem cell pioneer Dr. Shin Yong Moon, commented,
"Beginning new human lives at the embryonic stage, testing them to
see how useful they will be, and throwing away those who don't
measure up is demeaning--and not just to those who are sacrificed.
Those who survive are demeaned as well since they are allowed to
live only because they are sufficiently useful."
Daniel
McConchie, Director of Public Relations and Public Policy for The
Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity, said, "These experiments
reflect the growing cultural tendency to only value human life that
offers some concrete contribution to human existence. The act of
choosing some lives over others entirely because of their genetic
makeup is dehumanizing."
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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