Non-Embryonic Stem Cell Legislation Brings Gift of Hope this
Christmas
Chicago, Illinois -
December 22, 2005 - The Center for Bioethics and Human
Dignity is greatly encouraged by the recent passage of both federal
and state legislation that recognizes the reality of patient
treatments and cures, not through embryonic stem cells, but through
stem cells extracted from the umbilical cord blood.
"We are elated by news of these two significant pieces of
legislation," said CBHD President, Dr. Andrew Fergusson, "as they
recognize that science continues to yield treatments and cures
without ethical compromise. Embryonic stem cell research is
unethical and there are no clinically applicable results
foreseeable.”
Congress on Saturday passed a bill to establish a national databank
of umbilical cord blood and bone marrow that would allow doctors to
quickly find a match for patients who need transplants. Thursday,
Governor Doyle of Wisconsin signed into law a bill which requires
prenatal health care providers to offer pregnant women the option to
donate the umbilical cord blood of their newborn child to a blood
bank. CBHD
For Interviews with Center Personnel
Contact the Center at 847-317-4095, or by email at
info@cbhd.org
About The Center for Bioethics and Human
Dignity
The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity
is an international center located just north of
Chicago, Illinois. Its mission is to protect human dignity by
developing 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. |