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Scientist Pushing for Early Use of Stem Cells

hzs202 writes "BBC News is reporting that Professor Ian Wilmut is pushing for stem cell treatment to be offered to people with terminal illnesses. Professor Wilmut told journalists that the treatment could save lives or at least speed up the pace of research, however it is yet to be fully tested." From the article: "If we wait until things are totally tested and analyzed in animals, it will deny some people treatment"

39 of 263 comments (clear)

  1. Oblig. Futurama Quote, Serious Thought by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Farnsworth: As a man it has become too much of a chore for me to clean out my wrinkles each day. Is it true that stem cells may fight the aging process?

    Geneworks Woman: Well yes, in the same way an infant may fight Muhammed Ali! But -

    Farnsworth: One pound of stem cells please!


    But seriously, it seems to me that the motives of this Professor Wilmut may not be entirely pure. Certainly, it's difficult to argue against offering treatment to victims of neuro-degenerative disorders, and I know for a fact that if I was such a victim, I'd be clamoring for treatment as loud as anyone else, but does that make it right to use humans as guinea pigs to 'speed up the pace of research'?

    It's easy to point out the suffering people and make a play for accelerated protocols based upon sentiment. It's not so easy to adhere to the standards of medical ethics and integrity. If Professor Wilmut was an uninvolved commentator on the issue, his opinion might hold a bit more weight, but the fact that he is one of the central players in the field tends to impune his impartiality in the matter.
    --
    ____

    ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    1. Re:Oblig. Futurama Quote, Serious Thought by crazdgamer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But seriously, it seems to me that the motives of this Professor Wilmut may not be entirely pure. Certainly, it's difficult to argue against offering treatment to victims of neuro-degenerative disorders, and I know for a fact that if I was such a victim, I'd be clamoring for treatment as loud as anyone else, but does that make it right to use humans as guinea pigs to 'speed up the pace of research'?

      Absolutely. Patients have to sign the form when they get treatment. They know the risks involved. Besides, if there are no other options (usually the case when they're terminal), what do they have to lose? Everything else doesn't work, you might as well better the rest of the human race and be a guinea pig for a drug or treatment that might save the lives of thousands.

    2. Re:Oblig. Futurama Quote, Serious Thought by No2Gates · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If someone has a disease/disability and there are experimental treatments available, assuming that the patient was told all the risks, yada,yada,yada Why shouldn't they be allowed to try it on a human who would otherwise have no current possibility of a cure. If someone not affiliated with the medical or pharmacy field who had a disease tried manufacturing their own drug and tried it on themself, should that be illegal??

      --
      Every time you call tech support, a little kitten dies.
    3. Re:Oblig. Futurama Quote, Serious Thought by slavemowgli · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Humans aren't being used as guinea pigs - it's everyone's own choice whether they want to participate in such studies or not, but guinea pigs or other lab animals don't have that choice.

      For that reason alone, I think it's not only OK but in fact the *only* ethically sound opinion that we stop all animal tests immediately and only rely on volunteers for testing. At the risk of sounding cynical, if a disease is bad enough, people will sign up for tests; or, put another way, if noone signs up for tests, then the whole thing can't have been *that* bad, anyway. Humans can volunteer, or choose not to; animal testing is torture, pure and simple, and noone with intact personal ethics should lower themselves to that level.

      (And FWIW, I do say that as someone who has to take medication each day for a chronic disease.)

      --
      quidquid latine dictum sit altum videtur.
    4. Re:Oblig. Futurama Quote, Serious Thought by maynard · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "[...]but in fact the *only* ethically sound opinion that we stop all animal tests immediately and only rely on volunteers for testing."

      Uhhhh, this seems like a *really* *bad* *idea* to me. You do realize that most new treatments and drugs go through a series of dose efficacy and safety trials on animals prior to testing on people for good reason. I mean, isn't it a good idea to know beforehand what dose per/kg weight will likely kill before asking a person to try it out? It may not be pretty, but animal trials save lives. IMO, killing a few mice before testing on people is a *good* *thing*. --M

    5. Re:Oblig. Futurama Quote, Serious Thought by sfjoe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And would starting to treat terminally ill patients right now provide as much scientific value?

      It's interesting that this question would never have even come up without the activism of the HIV/AIDS community. Fast-tracking the FDA process was unheard of before then and nowadays many terminal diseases have advocates pushing for approvals, breast cancer is one prominent example.
      Just because you're treating people with an experimental procedure doesn't mean you abandon the scientific method. You can still have control groups and statistical analysis to advance the knowledge gained from treatments. As long as people are fully informed, I see no ethical problems.

      --
      It's simple: I demand prosecution for torture.
  2. Too good to wait? sometimes. by Bananatree3 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "If we wait until things are totally tested and analyzed in animals, it will deny some people treatment"

    This kind of thinking does actually make sense in some specific cases. If you take a look at the history of Lorenzo's Oil, (or if you have seen the movie), it tells about how the father of a boy found a treatment for a disease (ALD in this case), and he started the treatment right away on his boy. ALD is a degenerative disorder that eventually kills its victims within 2-3 years of diagnosis. This father's treatment worked so well in stopping the disease that the medical community decided to start human trials right away, and it has saved literally thousands of lives already. If they had gone the usual method of rat testing, than maybe humans several years later, many ALD victims would have died by that time.

    From the article: "If you've developed a treatment that might be beneficial in, say, motor neurone disease, then it's reasonable to allow people who are in the last stage of the disease to offer themselves. It sounds like they're being used as guinea pigs but sometimes people with a terminal illness volunteer to be used as guinea pigs if it will advance medical treatment for others," he said.

    Just as with the ALD case, there are people out there with fatal diseases who do not have time to live to wait for some clinical trial ten years away. Assuming the treatment is as effective a Lorenzo's Oil and obvious, I say people should have a choice when it comes to these trials. Obviously there must be some safeguard againt fraud biotech/pharmo companies who make crap treatments. But even with the threat of these charlatans, there are many treatments out there with the advent of Stem cells that are sitting in petri dishes in labs around the world. Many of these treatments have yielded very promising results, and if terminally ill people had a chance to try these promising ones, good treatments that would otherwise have to wait for a decade or two could come to light much more quickly.

  3. Depends greatly by Pedrito · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "If we wait until things are totally tested and analyzed in animals, it will deny some people treatment"

    We generally don't use humans as guinea pigs. Medical treatments need approval before they can be used. This guy clearly thinks the benefits outweigh the risk, but his opinion shouldn't be the one that decides.

    If early testing shows no serious side effects and tremendous benefits, treatments can sometimes be fast-tracked testing phases. But if every time someone believed as this man, a treatment skipped testing, more people would die than be saved.

    Testing and clinical trials exist for a reason. Because in many cases, they save lives. It's an imperfect system, to be sure, but it's better than the alternative.

    1. Re:Depends greatly by mcwop · · Score: 4, Insightful
      This guy clearly thinks the benefits outweigh the risk, but his opinion shouldn't be the one that decides.

      Maybe the patient should decide what treatments they want to pursue (experimental or otherwise), rather than the government.

      --

      "I don't think it's selfish, to eat defenseless shellfish." -NOFX

    2. Re:Depends greatly by tverbeek · · Score: 2, Insightful
      This guy clearly thinks the benefits outweigh the risk, but his opinion shouldn't be the one that decides.

      Right. It should be up to the patient's.

      What's so hard to grasp about informed consent and self-determination? You make sure that potential recipients of a treatment are given as complete a picture as possible of the risks and potential benefits, and let them decide. Not the doctor. Not the government. Not the HMO. Not the activists on one side or another of the debate. The patient.

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    3. Re:Depends greatly by Halfbaked+Plan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I suppose, if they can afford it.

      But if it's going to be tax funded, an elected governmental body should have some say in the matter.

      --
      resigned
    4. Re:Depends greatly by cgenman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But if every time someone believed as this man, more people would die than be saved.

      Not if they were going to die anyway.

      If you are in the later stages of a serious brain degenerative disease, and have 6 months to live, if a treatment has a 10% chance of success and providing you with another 40 years of life and a 90% chance of killing you in 6 months, it's still worth doing.

      Testing and clinical trials are a necessary system, and many of the major medical screw-ups in recent memory have come from not enough of the above, rather than too many. However, when you're talking about people who have basically no chance of survival, you should take greater risks to try and help them. The cost of a failed treatment is death, but the cost of not treating is also death.

  4. Good or bad or in between? by Cmdr_earthsnake · · Score: 3, Insightful

    could save lives or at least speed up the pace of research, however it is yet to be fully tested." From the article: "If we wait until things are totally tested and analyzed in animals, it will deny some people treatment"

    There are two arguments for this problem, the first being that people should enjoy life while they are dying and not get tested on and have as long a life as possible. The second argument is that they SHOULD be treated and use whatevers possible that may work to help treat the problem.

    I find myself falling on both sides of the fence, as if it goes horribly wrong, unspeakable things could happen with usage of stem cells. But I also think that if it has the potential to save people's lives, and minimize suffering and help people in general, it should be used.

    --
    #!/bin/bash
    login root
    chmod 775 universe://
    1. Re:Good or bad or in between? by dago · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Er, what about the third argument : let those who have terminal illnesses decides if and how they wanna live and get treated ?

      --
      #include "coucou.h"
  5. Re:You Go Doc!! by SengirV · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Against God's will? Not hardly. More likely against harvesting the aborted babies for the material to make your skin look younger.

    --

    Prof. Farnsworth - "Oh a lesson in not changing history from Mr I'm-My-Own-Grandpa!"

  6. So... by StarKruzr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    better to not develop them at all, lest they fall into the hands of wealthy people?

    wtf, man?

    Expensive drugs like AIDS treatments have found their way into the hands of plenty of poor people. What the hell are you talking about?

    What life-saving medical procedures are ONLY available to wealthy people?

    --

    +++ATH0
    1. Re:So... by Elvis+Parsley · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Expensive drugs like AIDS treatments have found their way into the hands of plenty of poor people."

      Major pharmecutical companies have been fighting attempts by African governments to essentially pirate the design of AIDS drugs. Poor African countries, which are suffering from AIDS epidemics, might be able to buy significant quantities of drugs at cost, but certainly can't pay prices which include the drug companies getting their royalties. Which means that lots of poor Africans are dying so that multinational drug companies can show a profit.

      Of course, if they did give away those drug designs (and, by extention, other massively useful and necessary drug designs) so that the poor could live, there's every chance that the companies would fold and there wouldn't be any new drugs to stop the next plague.

      To sum up: life sucks.

    2. Re:So... by timster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You make me sick. Really.

      I have a chronic condition that may always require treatment (though it's not AIDS). It's a near miracle, though, that treatment is available at all. Coming up with that required dedication by scientists around the world, and you spit on their efforts just because they haven't come up with a "cure". I'm just happy to be alive, and that's only possible in this day and age (and yes, with the help of "evil" drug companies.)

      News flash, brother -- we aren't gods, and we don't have magic. Sometimes treatment is all we can do.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    3. Re:So... by FooAtWFU · · Score: 2, Insightful
      News flash, brother -- we aren't gods, and we don't have magic. Sometimes treatment is all we can do.

      Aye, and sometimes treatment is better than we can do. There are amazingly few cures for disease in the world of medicine, most notably antibiotics (though you need to watch out for the antibiotic-resistant strains). Categorically, we simply can't cure viruses, which is why we have vaccines for flu and such that you need to get before you catch the flu itself.

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    4. Re:So... by jnaujok · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In Uganda (I believe it was Uganda, I read the article some time ago) where the government started a policy of AIDS prevention education the rate of AIDS infection dropped by over 90%. Uganda now has one of the lowest infection rates in Africa. The cost of this education was less than 5% of what they would have spent on the drugs to treat the new infections had the previous infection rate continued.

      You, on the other hand, advocate allowing the infection rate to continue, and demand that drug makers must pay for creation and shipment of drugs to people who are unwilling to simply not engage in dangerous practices. This is the equivalent of telling the people of London in the 1600's suffering from the Black Plague, that the problem is there's not enough penecillian (not to mention that it hadn't been invented yet), not that we need to clean the rats and human feces out of the streets. In your world, you'd make Alexander Fleming pay to distribute it through the rat infested warrens of the city and damn the sanitation department as prejudiced jerks if they want to do anything about the slovenly conditions.

      In typical emotion-led fashion, you take the point of advocating that they continue to live in filthy ignorance and that you'll preserve that lifestyle no matter how much it costs to those who've gotten themselves out of that same self-destructive lifestyle.

      And I bet you consider yourself compassionate too.

      --
      Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
    5. Re:So... by Razor+Sex · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're the only one who is making medication and education seem mutally exclusive. Why not do BOTH?

    6. Re:So... by susano_otter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Given how fragile the AIDS virus is, and how difficult it is to transmit, I'd have thought that the easiest and cheapest way to prevent the spread of AIDS in Africa would be for African governments to convince their citizens to stop behaving like asshats.

      But hey, why bother trying to educate and empower your people, when you can simply blame it all on big pharma while you sit back and wait for^H^H^Hdemand handouts from the world government?

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    7. Re:So... by susano_otter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hey, abstinence is a guaranteed prophylactic against all kinds of horrible diseases, not to mention unwanted pregnancies and the whole cascade of social and personal ills that brings.

      Are you saying that the people of Africa lack the insight to see the wisdom of such a course, and the self-control to adopt it?

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

    8. Re:So... by BorgCopyeditor · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Are you saying that the people of Africa lack the insight to see the wisdom of such a course, and the self-control to adopt it?

      Self-control or self-mutilation? Staying indoors is a guaranteed prophylactic against roadway accidents. Do you have the insight to see the lack of wisdom in inferring from that that one should just stay indoors?

      I'm against horrible diseases and unwanted pregnancies, but I don't have to be celibate to uphold those values. Why should anyone else be? The only reason can be that one is surreptitiously advocating a life in which people have little to no sexual intercourse, or only under highly restricted circumstances (e.g., marriage as a "sex license"). This is not wisdom. People who have no sexual contact in their lives are unhappier and unhealthier than those who do. It's something we're made for, and it's not something that false threats (of death, pregnancy, or worse :) can or ought to change.

      Are you aware of studies that show no discernible change in the number of unwanted pregnancies in U.S. school districts where "abstinence-only" education is mandated by school boards? Teaching teens about safer sexual practices, by contrast, has been shown to have the good effects on which you claim to base your appeal to abstinence. If those results were proved to your satisfaction, would that change your mind?

      --
      Shop as usual. And avoid panic buying.
    9. Re:So... by susano_otter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It might, in fact, change my mind.

      On the other hand, it may not. I suspect there are other factors involved.

      For one thing, not all people are made happier and healthier by increasing their sexual activity or their number of sexual partners. It's my contention that the healthy and fulfilling role of sexual intercourse is not well understood, nor well communicated, and that the failure of the abstinence-only program may be due in large part to its being presented in a vacuum.

      Also, I'm not sure that the adolescent bias in favor of the more permissive, sexually promiscuous teaching, and the adolescent tendency to reject the more restrictive, contrary-to-passing-hormonal-urges teaching, is in itself indicative.

      Mind you, I'm not advocating the repression of human sexuality, but rather a more thoughtful and self-controlled approach to it.

      Animals act without thinking on their various urges. Humans do not, or should not, anyway.

      Human sexual intimacy isn't just "animal sex with condoms", and pitching it that way won't solve all our problems.

      I mean, how much of our current problems with sexual intercourse in both America and Africa can be attributed directly to a culture of sexual promiscuity? And how much of those problems can really be solved by moving to "sexual promiscuity with a condom on top"?

      Millions of people, in all times and places, have lived happy, healthy, satisfying, and fulfilling lives, all the while practicing the disciplines of chastity and monogamy.

      Now you pooh-pooh those disciplines, and offer a rubber sheath as a superior solution. It'll be interesting to see how the Condom Generation turns out, and if their understanding of human sexuality ends up building a better tomorrow than our parents' did.

      --

      Any sufficiently well-organized community is indistinguishable from Government.

  7. Been here, done this by PMuse · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In what way is the argument for untested deployment of stem cell therapies different from the argument for untested deployment of any other new drug or treatment?

    There is always a balance to be struck between safety and delay. The procedures exist for exactly this reason: to guide us in balancing risk and potential reward.

    --
    "We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals." --The American President (20.1.2009)
  8. Re:And feed them with our babies ... by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Insightful

    No thanks, I'll not inject myself with dead babies.

    Calling a stem cell a baby, is like calling a microwave a weapon of mass destruction. Stem cells are just that, cells. They have the potential to become something else, given the proper conditions, but so does pretty much anything else. Vitamins could be given to a pregnant woman, and then make there way through her body to her fetus, which could then grow into a sentient human being. The vitamins would make up part of that new person's body. But what if the woman had an abortion? Then those vitamins would be wasted. And, by your arguments, it would be unethical to reuse them.

    If you think abortion is wrong, all the time, at any point in the process, well that is just fine. But arguing that abortion, by association, taints the very matter of the universe, well that is just plain foolish.

    As a side note, you do know that there are many sources for stem cells, aside from abortions, right?

  9. Something to ponder by clark625 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Stem cells present their own bit of politics, and really, I don't want to get into that discussion here. Lots of smart, well meaning people believe they should be used regardless of the source. Other smart, well meaning people believe that some restrictions should be in placed on the sources. It's not worth a flame war.

    As to the real issue: Marketing. Anyone else recall that soda was first just another cure-all drug, available at the pharmacy? Certainly lots of people have heard of snake-oil. Heck, asperin was also a cure-all.

    I'm not saying that stem-cell research doesn't have some nifty possibilities. In fact, I think it'll bring several new advancements to medicine. But, it's also being touted as THE way to solve every current problem that's mystified smart, well meaning scientists for a while. It's like you've got a job to do around your house, but you don't have the right tool for it (and don't even know what tool to use); so when a new tool is invented you immediately wonder how you could use the new tool for your job.

    Anyway, as to your post specifically: If you really do have a serious illness, I would want you to get the best medical help that you could get. That means carefully weighing all the options, current medicine and research. Where I have problems is that in many of these cases, a doctor would recommend a certain risky new treatment over one that has marginal success but has been utilized numerous times. And, since you're the one suffering, you may not be able to properly weigh your options. I honestly don't care if people want to volunteer for research--but I don't think that the doctors doing the treatment are always giving the honest, hard facts; and I know it's very difficult to make huge life-and-death decisions when you're suffering. To me, that just makes the whole situation prone to abuse. That's why the FDA exists, and has such high standards. It's to prevent well-meaning doctors and scientists from getting tunnel vision and falling into the trap that "the ends justify the means".

    Personally, I don't want a risky treatment if there are other, less dangerous options. That's even if these less-risky treatments have a lower probability of success.

    --
    Long, cute, or funny Sigs are just another form of over compensation, used by geeks, nerdz, etc.
  10. Re:And feed them with our babies ... by scheming+daemons · · Score: 3, Insightful
    ....that gives you the right to murder(as seen by the other side) a baby for better looking skin?

    This straw man of yours.. "for better looking skin" is bit ridiculous. Find any reference in the article... or in any of the words by serious proponents of fetal stem cell research... that is referring to something as superficial as "better looking skin".

    It's a false argument, and you know it. Nobody's talking about stem cell research for non-life-saving purposes.

    It's a common tactic of "your side"... and it stinks.

    and you also said this: So because you believe life begins when a baby leaves the mother's womb with absolutely nothing from me to indicate that. Fetal stem cell research is done with cells from unimplanted embryos... not from full-term babies. And you know it. Unimplanted embryos that were the result of IVFs and designated for the trash ANYWAY. You knew that too. We're not talking about "babies in their mother's wombs".. we're talking about embryos that have never been implanted IN a womb ... AND NEVER WILL BE. And you knew that too.

    But keep setting up your straw men to knock down. It's a lot easier to win an argument when you invent the other side of it.

    --
    "I have as much authority as the pope, I just
    don't have as many people who believe it" - George Carlin

  11. Re:And feed them with our babies ... by SengirV · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I know there are multiple sources for stem cells. I simply objected to the readily available source that the vast majority here are clamoring for without giving a second thought - embryonic stem cells.

    You can read whatever else you want from my statement, but that is all I was getting at. Get the stem cells from other sources(target's own body, umbilical cord, etc...), and I have no problem.

    --

    Prof. Farnsworth - "Oh a lesson in not changing history from Mr I'm-My-Own-Grandpa!"

  12. would I? by hostingreviews · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My mom died and dad died of illnesses that could have been prevented, assuming this stem cell hype is true. Would I sign the waver allowing it to be done for them without knowing if they wanted it? Absofreakinglootly.

    Why wouldn't I? Whos stalling here? People are dying, at least try it ONCE for crying out loud. Some patients can't get worse.

  13. Re:And feed them with our babies ... by Chaffar · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Well, the same you'd object to the use of stem cells to cure incurable/terminal disease, the Jehovah's Witnesses object to the idea of blood transfusions. What would you think if somebody died because he refused a blood transfusion after a major car accident? A blood transfusion is a way to save millions of lives, but it had to overcome social hurdles. Stem cells is also a way to save millions of lives, and is also controversial.

    No thanks, I'll not inject myself with dead babies.

    As long as you don't impose your choice on others... Some people would gladly inject themselves with dead babies, because they want to walk, talk and live normally again, and if it costs the use of cells that potentially could grow to become another person given the right conditions, then it's an ethical issue THEY have to deal with, not us.

  14. Snake Oil by argStyopa · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While I understand the good faith efforts of people to implement working cures faster, I think this is incredibly thin ice to tread on.

    Let's all keep in mind Barnum's Maxim when we hasten to implement all those "great" cures out there, that the (pokey, old fashioned, heartless gov/corps) don't immediately start distributing. There are LOTS of examples where the "perfect cure" ended up having heartbreakingly bad collateral consequences. Thalidomide, anyone?

    If you, as a terminally ill patient, are willing to make yourself into a medical experiment that's cool - you will good or bad end up advancing medical knowledge to the benefit of all of us. (In fact, my father is still alive and thriving today due to a then-experimental bone marrow replacement technique.) But when you sign up for this stuff, you MUST then accept the consequences of being a lab rat, ie. you may die.

    But make these decisions for YOURSELF, not for others. For the bulk of the population, the nice, long duration exhaustive testing works just fine. I personally think it's irresponsible for a scientist or a doctor to advocate this for anyone else.

    --
    -Styopa
  15. Re:So, this would imply that... by scheming+daemons · · Score: 4, Insightful
    what is not mentioned enough is that there are three type of stem cells. 1. Adult, in use currently have had the most success with these. 2. umbilical cord stem cells, work great also, everyone should donate their child's cord. (my wife and i will around july 20th.) 3. stem cells from fetus's. they have only been found to cause cancer, they are testing with the ample set they have, and have not been able to have ANY success. 1,2 work great, 3 DOES NOT WORK at all yet.

    This is patently false, which is why I suppose you posted as AC. Stem cells from fetuses have NOT been found to cause cancer - that is misinformation put out by religious right groups. And there is NOT an "ample set" of fetal stem cells to test with... Bush lied about that. There are only 12 lines available for legal research in this country, not the "over 60" that Bush told of.

    Thank goodness that the current U.S. administration doesn't have control over research being done elsewhere in the world... so this important work is still being done - just without the U.S.'s help.

    You can all cut through the bullshit by learning for yourselves what stem cell research is all about:

    Stem Cell FAQ by Stem Cell Research Foundation

    --
    "I have as much authority as the pope, I just
    don't have as many people who believe it" - George Carlin

  16. Re:Well... good.... by jnaujok · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Come again?

    Stem Cell research is thriving in the United States. In fact, most of the applications have come from U.S. labs.

    Even Embryonic stem cell research is going on right now in the United States, including labs funded with Federal Research Grants.

    The *only* thing not allowed in the U.S. is the creation of new embryonic stem cell lines (through the destruction of a fertilized embryo) using Federal funds.

    And given the fact that currently adult stem cell research is approaching 40 different applications and embryonic stem cell research has currently found, uhm, zero , I'm okay with that.

    --
    Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
  17. From the medical professions standpoint... by QuaintRealist · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Most people don't realise it, but you can get non-FDA approved therapies, including drug therapies, in this country unless they have been banned for some reason (like heroin, for example, or Laetril). Non approved drugs can be imported for personal use on order of a physician.

    We in the medical fields do, however, have a responsibility to protect the public from fraud. It is hard to make an informed decision even if you are trained, and have the facts at your disposal. And to say "well, I'm dying anyway, what can it hurt" doesn't take into consideration the many harms done by bad therapy - delay in proper treatment (if any), co-morbidities, and even economic ills. I mean, you're dying - do you want to impoverish your soon-to-be widow by spending everything on worthless treatments? How about your kids?

    I'm not saying stem cell research is worthless - it's almost undoubtably not. Healthcare decisions are hard, though. TFA(uthor) does not give enough credit to the thought and work which should be done before giving these therapies to anyone, dying or not.

    --
    Using plain ol' text since 1968
  18. Truth does hurt, but that is not the truth by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Stem cells do not come from aborted babies. They don't even come from fetuses. They are blastocyst.
    Really the choice is "Do we throw away these cells that we already have, or do we do research to cure the sick who are alive?"

    Here is some good news for you:
    Research is underway to created stem cells in the dish. Now, if you want to put your money where you mouth is, support that research.

    Of course, people like you often bask in there ignorance like it is some rightous fire, but it's not.

    The same arguements where said for blood transfusions, transplants, and even steril working enviroments.

    Please return to your mud hut.

    Finally, I hope you relize that you HAVE to be against In vitro fertilization, if you are against the use of embryonic stem cells.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  19. Response from someone with a terminal disease... by jamescarl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When you are faced with a terminal disease, there are a number of issues that most people don't understand. First off, you want to extend your life as long as possible. There comes a time, however, when regular treatments don't work and the only options available are experiemental treatments. As someone about to reach that point, I feel that if I can donate my body to medical science before I die so that others can be saved, it's the least I can do. Also, from a selfish standpoint, there is the possibility that experimental science can extent my life. Now, I'm not in favor of experimenting myself for studies that are too dangerous but that's my decision, not others. In a free country, the right to control how and what I do with my life and my body are not the decisions of the government or any of you. Obviously, these studies need to be controlled so that they don't get written up in the National Journal of Evil under studies on growing arms out of backs, but they are currently done every day at hospitals and research centers around the world.

  20. Yes. by StarKruzr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The idea that there is some kind of conspiracy to stop cancer and AIDS cures from becoming public knowledge is absurd. Whoever comes up with them will be able to retire 20 times on the proceeds.

    Think about it. You could get AIDS, cure yourself, GET IT AGAIN, AND CURE IT AGAIN. The irresponsibility of the average idiot alone would be enough to keep the drug companies flush with cash for DECADES.

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    +++ATH0