Limitations of Stem Cell Research
The primary objection to stem cell research in the United States is based on the belief that commonly held social, moral, and ethical boundaries will be breached in the effort to ensure adequate supplies of embryonic stem cells (Hoffman, et al., 2004; Reeves, 2001) Because of the potential medical and economic implications of stem cell research, executive level governmental decisions have been made regarding acceptable limits for stem cell research (Hoffman, et al., 2004; Reeves, 2001) These limits have changed as the national executive leadership has changed (Hoffman, et al., 2004; Reeves, 2001) Presidents have issued Executive Orders regarding stem cell research that reflect their personal beliefs and the beliefs expressed by voices dominating the American press at any given time (Hoffman, et al., 2004; Reeves, 2001) Representation of stem cell researchers and those who potentially would benefit from stem cell research have been less well reflected in the national debate about how to provide oversight and how to legislate the issue of stem cell research (Hoffman, et al., 2004; Reeves, 2001) What is most often disregarded in the debate is that embryonic stem cells can be harvested from embryos produced in assisted reproductive technology (ART) laboratories to provide viable embryos for women experiencing fertility problems (Robinson, 2007) The debate about whether embryos should be permitted to be developed in laboratories for eventual implantation in infertile women does not attract the attention of the media or particular interest groups to the same degree that stem cell research, taken as a singular issue, does -- but perhaps it should (Robinson, 2007) Given the inconsistencies in the arguments presented by different stakeholder groups with regard to regulation of stem cell research, it is reasonable to expect any limitations placed on stem cell research reflect the actual praxis and not the imagination or rhetoric of its opponents (Robinson, 2007) Embryonic stem cell research that uses stem cells derived from undifferentiated mass of cells called blastocysts -- pre-embryos less than 14 days old -- for in-vitro fertilization shall be considered a viable source of stem cells for medical research to prevent or cure human diseases and disorders (Robinson, 2007)
Part Two -- Argument
The public treats stem cell research as a special ethical and moral case while largely ignoring parallel ethical and moral issues related to the treatment and use of embryos in the practice of artificial human reproduction (Robinson, 2007) Ethical and legal implications exist for extracting new stem cells from embryos, from research performed on descendents of stem cells, from the problem of surplus embryos in ART clinics, and for developing methods of obtaining embryonic stem cells with fewer moral and ethical concerns (Robinson, 2007) The current emphasis on restricting embryonic stem cell research creates a disjoint between press coverage and protests related to other ethically challenging practices that is unduly constraining promising science (Robinson, 2007)
The approximate number of in-vetro embryos that died, were killed, and were eventually discarded by fertility clinics each year runs in the hundreds of thousands (Robinson, 2007) Despite that fact that members of the pro-life movement consider embryos to be human beings, pro-life groups seem focused on the few dozen or so embryos that have been killed through stem cell extraction while inexplicably ignoring the masses of embryos destroyed by ART clinics (Robinson, 2007) Controversy over stem cell research is in part a function of the many different ways that human life can be defined at the cellular level (Robinson, 2007)
Stem cells are a distinct form of human life that contains human DNA, and can exist for a time outside of the human body under very particular and customized conditions (Hoffman, et al., 2004; Reeves, 2001) Three...
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