« An illustration of how selectively reporting the facts can give a false impression | Main | Boston Terror Suspect Already Arrested »

January 23, 2005

Stem cell research: MA is further behind than we thought

Thanks to the Globe's editorial board for pointing out that in Massachusetts, research on embryonic stem cells requires the advance approval of the local district attorney's office.  This is apparently because of a peculiarity in a 1974 law dealing with research on fetuses.

The district attorney's office??  Wow.  Other states, like California and most recently New Jersey, are actively encouraging stem cell research within their borders by supporting it with public funds -- thereby circumventing the ill-advised ban on federal money for such research.  On the other hand, we in Massachusetts not only do not offer support for this research, but insist that you get a permission slip from the county prosecutor or risk being sent to jail.  Gosh, if I were a scientist interested in unlocking the potential of this research to cure human diseases, which state would I want to work in?

The legislature needs to get on this now.  Even if the state doesn't want to commit to putting up public money just yet, for God's sake let's get rid of this absurd district attorney requirement!

UPDATE: AP reports that Trav, DiMasi, and His Excellency all have come out publicly in support of stem cell research, notwithstanding the objections of certain special interest groups.  Let's do it, guys.

Posted by David at 10:39 AM in Massachusetts | Permalink

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83456d93f69e200e55078b68c8834

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Stem cell research: MA is further behind than we thought:

Comments

As far as I understand Romney supports research on embryos that otherwise would be discarded from the clinics. However, he does not support human cloning. As a researcher, I think that embryonic stem cell researchers can be beneficial;however, I do not agree that human cloning is ethical. You can take an egg cell and inject a DNA into it that would interfere with a funciton of a certain gene, thus you will create a so called "knockout human cell line", this is the same experiments that are currently done on mice and rats embryonic cells...do we want to put humans on the same level of experimentation.
In any case, the embryonic stem cell research and human cloning are inevitable, in less than a few years they will be legalized in most countries around the world including ours.

Posted by: Researcher | Mar 28, 2005 11:35:40 PM

Post a comment