Many people think the new work on embryonic
stem cells is a major breakthrough with the same potential to change
health care as the discovery of antibiotics more than seventy years
ago. They feel that it is acceptable to work with the very early
human foetus for the potential benefit to millions of people.
The vast majority of human foetuses never make it beyond the early
stages – in both natural conception and in infertility
treatment, far more embryos fail to develop than go on to form living
babies, so using a small number of early embryos is acceptable in
this context.
People who agree with stem cell research suggest that once tissue
lines from a relatively small number of willingly donated embryos
are established, the need to use further embryos would be reduced.
The medical advances which are within our grasp would change medicine
as it has been known for many years and give hope of a cure to millions
of people for whom there is, at the moment, no hope.
What is more, many supporters of stem cell research feel that adult
stem cells do not offer a good alternative as they are much more
limited in their scope for forming new and different tissues. They
want research funding to be directed mainly at embryonic stem cell
work.
There are others who feel that the use of embryonic tissue is
wrong and an abuse of human rights.
Some people feel that every early human embryo has the potential
to become a living human being and so should be afforded the same
human rights as a fully grown adult. Others have strong religious
convictions which make them feel that using embryos is killing and
therefore wrong. These people feel that no medical advances are
worth the moral evil of using embryonic tissue as a source of stem
cells. They also feel that the use of adult stem cells offers an
exciting and acceptable possible alternative and campaign for research
funding to be directed to projects using these ethically less sensitive
cells.
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