March 27, 2009 | 30 comments

Bush bioethics advisors take potshot at Obama stem cell platform

Prestigious Hastings Center bioethics think tank publishes comments by more than half of President Bush's bioethics council

By Jordan Lite   

 

Motor neuron progenitors, in green, derived from human embryonic stem cells/Sharyn Rossi in the lab of Hans Keirstead (http://stemcell.uci.edu/) at UC Irvine, courtesy of California Institute for Regenerative Medicine

e-mail print comment

You might have thought that President Obama's recent order earlier this month, lifting restrictions on federally funded stem cell research, would render obsolete the opinions of a Bush-appointed council tasked with advising the former chief executive on stem cells and other hot-button bioethics issues.

Evidently not.

Ten members of The President's Council on Bioethics, an 18-member bioethics advisory panel appointed by President Bush but still active until the end of September 2009, wrote in the Hastings Center's Bioethics Forum blog that Obama's description of his March 9 executive order as "lift[ing] the ban on federal funding for promising embryonic stem cell research" was an inaccurate characterization of Bush's restrictions, which limited federally funded stem cell research to cell lines created before August 9, 2001.

Echoing conservative talking points of the past several years, Bush's policy "did not ban federal funding of embryonic stem cell research; rather, for the first time, it provided and endorsed such funding (as long as the stem cell lines had been derived prior to that date)," the council members wrote.

In Wednesday's post, the panelists wrote that they are expressing their own views and not those of the 18-member council itself, which was charged in 2001 with studying emerging technologies and their ethical implications.

The bioethics council's term expires September 30, according to an executive order signed by Bush two years ago. The council's spokesperson, Diane Gianelli, said she wasn't aware of any members planning to step down before then.

Obama does not have a bioethics council, but he appointed a chief science advisor, John Holdren, and has other scientists advising him on science policy issues. The White House didn't have any details today about whether he'll ultimately set up his own bioethics panel, as presidents have in some form since 1974.

Tom Murray, president of The Hastings Center and a member of  the Clinton administration's National Bioethics Advisory Commission, tells ScientificAmerican.com that he expects Obama to dissolve Bush's council or allow it to lapse. "This is their opportunity to get a last shot at the new president," Murray said of the commentary, adding that it would have "probably little or no effect" on Obama's ability to carry out his stem cell platform. "They are taking a proactive strike, directed at trying to influence NIH [National Institutes of Health] rather than having any substantive content about what the president said," Murray said.

"We certainly respect that there are differing viewpoints and this is in some respects a difficult issue," an Obama administration official tells ScientificAmerican.com. "The authors of this blog post were selected by the previous administration based on their set views on this issue and obviously we have a very different view on whether stem cell research deserves more of an investment. NIH is going to be producing guidelines that ensure that stem cell research proceeds ethically and responsibly and the president made clear when he announced that this was a top priority for him."

In his order reversing Bush's policy, Obama gave the NIH 120 days to decide what kind of embryonic stem cell research it would fund. He didn't say where those embryos should come from, and whether federally funded studies should include research on embryos that would otherwise be discarded by fertility clinics.



Read Comments (30) | Post a comment 1 2 Next >


Share
Propeller    Digg!  Reddit delicious  Fark 
Slashdot    RT @sciam Bush bioethics advisors take potshot at Obama stem cell platformTwitter Review it on NewsTrust 
sharebar end

You Might Also Like


Discuss This Article


Click here to submit your comment.

VIEW:

2,573 characters remaining
 
  Email me when someone responds to this discussion.
 

risk free issue 

Sciam - cover Email:
Name:
Address:
Address 2:
City:
State:  
spacer




Editor's Pick

  • Adapting to the Freshwater CrisisForward-thinking experts are getting a better handle on the growing global water shortage and coming up with innovative approaches to ensuring the security, safety and sustainability of this resource

Newsletter

Health & Medicine Newsletter

Get weekly coverage delivered to your inbox


 Podcasts

  • 60-Second Earth     RSS  · iTunes The Jellyfish Menace
    click to enable

    Download

  • 60-Second Science     RSS  · iTunes Plants Share Light If Neighbor Is Related
    click to enable

    Download





ADVERTISEMENT
 
 


Also on Scientific American


© 1996-2009 Scientific American Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.
ADVERTISEMENT