Scientists Backtrack on Embryonic Research Claims



Scientific researchers are now beginning the tedious task of altering the public’s expectations of the aims of human embryonic stem-cell research, deviating from the primary goals of providing stem-cell therapies to cure diseases. In what amounts to a bait and switch, these researchers, no longer promising immediate theoretical cures for a myriad of diseases desired by a desperate public, are now justifying the research by claiming that human embryonic cells are instead marvelous research tools for investigating the mechanisms of disease rather than actively curing them.

According to an article in the New York Times, a number of scientists have desired to continue medical research on human embryos, but admit that the idea of ready cures from embryonic stem-cell therapies, if possible in the first place, are years down the road. This especially considering the inherent difficulties of developing these stem-cells for therapeutic use. Instead these researches want to change the primary focus to drug research or learning about diseases through embryonic stem-cell experiments.

“Many of us feel that for the next few years the most rational way forward is not to try to push cell therapies,” said Dr. Jessell, a neurobiologist at Columbia University Medical Center in New York. Dr. Jessell hopes that embryonic stem-cell research will yield drugs for neurodegenerative diseases within the next five years, conceding that a long time must pass before stem-cell based therapies will be considered effective.

Another neurobiologist at Columbia University Medical Center, Dr. Henderson admitted, “We all thought cell therapy first, then many of us realized there were a lot of hurdles to be crossed before that.”

“Stem cell biology is just a rubric that applies to many things going on in biology,” said John D. Gearhart, a stem-cell expert at Johns Hopkins University. “I personally feel that the beauty of these cells is that we’ll learn a lot about human biology and disease processes, and that that information will be more important than the cells themselves.”

However, this latest admission validates the conviction of many scientists and bioethicists who have opposed embryonic stem-cell research on the grounds of the dearth of evidence proving any practical possibility of obtaining the promised cures from embryonic stem cells. Instead embryonic stem-cell research is seemingly being exposed as a playground for scientists pushing this new front in human experimentation.

In a previous interview with LifeSiteNews.com, Dr. Peter Hollands, who holds a PhD in Stem Cell Biology from Cambridge University in the UK, and had worked as a clinical embryologist at Bourn Hall Clinic &#0151 the world's first IVF unit said, “Embryonic stem cells have yet to be used to treat any form of disease” and maintained that the real potential for cures exists in the use of adult stem-cells.

He added, “Adult and umbilical cord blood stem cells are readily available, have no objections associated with them and are tried and tested in clinical use. Umbilical cord blood stem cells, for example, have been used over 3000 times for 45 different diseases!”

However, funds that could advance real cures from ethical sources such as cord blood or adult stem-cells are siphoned off to embryonic stem-cell researchers, who whip up popular support among people through hollow promises of a medical panacea bought with the destruction of countless human beings.

David Kelly, a researcher and director of the Cures 1st Foundation, Inc. penned an article for the Seoul Times revealing that adult stem cells have consistently outperformed embryonic stem cells, which he indicated were “genetically unstable and function abnormally.” The recent statements from embryonic researchers justify for him his reasons for abandoning faith in embryonic stem-cell research in 2002: “a horrifying vision &#0151 the image of millions of desperate and trusting humans holding plates of hope to an empty sky.”

(This article courtesy of LifeSiteNews.com.)

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