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Stem Cell Funding Ban: Appeals Court Allows Funding To Continue For Now

Stem Cell Ruling

PETE YOST and LAURAN NEERGAARD   09/10/10 12:06 AM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — The government may resume funding of embryonic stem cell research for now, an appeals court said Thursday, but the short-term approval may be of little help to research scientists caught in a legal battle that has just begun.

It is far from certain that scientists actually will continue to get federal money as they struggle to decide what to do with research that is hard to start and stop.

After U.S. District Court Judge Royce Lamberth issued a preliminary order barring the funding on Aug. 23, the National Institutes of Health suspended work on funding new research projects on embryonic stem cells. While NIH didn't immediately comment Thursday on the temporary stay from the appeals court, the government's process for approving these grants is unlikely to resume before a final court resolution.

With appeals, that could be many months off.

"No way this would be a scientific reprieve," said Patrick Clemins of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Scientists who already have received taxpayer money for stem cell experiments can continue their work until their dollars run out, but 22 projects that were due to get yearly checks in September were told after Lamberth's order that they'd have to find other money. Most of the researchers have multiple sources of funding and are working now to separate what they can and can't continue, Clemins said.

Medical researchers value stem cells because they are master cells that can turn into any tissue of the body. Research eventually could lead to cures for spinal cord injuries, Parkinson's disease and other ailments, they believe.

The Obama administration is asking the appeals court in Washington to strike down a preliminary injunction by Lamberth that blocked the funding. Lamberth left little doubt that he is inclined to issue a final order barring that funding, but he has yet to issue that ruling, which inevitably will set off a new round of appeals.

Lamberth concluded that those who challenged the government support had demonstrated a strong likelihood of success in their lawsuit. He said the clear intent of a law passed by Congress was to prohibit federal spending on research in which a human embryo is destroyed.

Steven H. Aden, senior legal counsel for the Alliance Defense Fund, which is involved with that lawsuit, said after Thursday's action, "The American people should not be forced to pay for even one more day of experiments that destroy human life, have produced no real-world treatments and violate an existing federal law."

Lamberth rejected the administration's request to let funding continue while it appealed his preliminary order, but the three-member appeals panel disagreed on Thursday. It is suspending Lamberth's ruling for now.

The appeals judges pointedly cautioned that their three-paragraph order "should not be construed in any way as a ruling on the merits."

"Nothing has really changed, because all issues are still out there and still unresolved," said Dr. Norman Fost, director of the bioethics program at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, who was on the National Academy of Sciences committee that wrote the first national guidelines on embryonic human stem cells.

Samuel B. Casey, part of the legal team representing those who filed the lawsuit, said, "We expect that when the court of appeals reviews the merits of the case, it will agree with the logic that led Judge Lamberth to issue the preliminary injunction."

He added, "We remain confident in our case against the unlawful, unethical and unnecessary federal funding of experimentation on human embryos."

Justice Department spokesman Charles Miller said the appeals court order "will allow this important, lifesaving research to continue while we present further arguments to the court in the weeks to come."

John Robertson, a University of Texas professor who specializes in law and bioethics, said Thursday's appeals court order doesn't relieve researchers working on multiyear projects of the uncertainty of whether there will be funding beyond this year.

"They've received the first year of a grant, and they will have to stop when the money runs out," Robertson said in an interview.

Lisa Hughes, president of the Coalition for the Advancement of Medical Research, said her organization was pleased.

"It is crucial that federal funding for human embryonic stem cell research be restored permanently, and this stay is a step in that direction," Hughes said. "While this issue continues to be argued in the courts, we call on Congress to move swiftly to resolve this issue and secure the future of this important biomedical research."

The appeals judges in the case are Karen LeCraft Henderson, Janice Rogers Brown, and Thomas B. Griffith. Henderson was appointed by George H.W. Bush and Brown and Griffith were appointed by George W. Bush.

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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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scjk67 03:13 PM on 09/09/2010
Good deal! Even Nancy Reagan and Christiphor (Superman) Reeve begged Dubya Bush to keep Stem-Cell research alive and he ignored their request because it can help find cure for Alzheimers and spinal injuries or diseases and Dubya used his Executive Order to block it and blocked nearly all scientifc research. Kudo to the courts lifting the band. Apparently Bush and his cabals didn't care for human lives  Read More...
09:28 AM on 09/10/2010
Titus 2 hours ago (7:14 AM)
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what class of cells are those that are harvested from umbilical cord blood? Would these be considered Embryonic or Adult?

just curious
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The stem cells in the umbilical cord and placenta are totipotent, meaning that like embryonic stem cells, they can become any tissue in the body; the only difference is they can also differentiate to become the cells of the placenta and/or umbilical cord, something embryonic stem cells cannot do. The totipotent cells of the cord and placenta are generally considered to be a class of stem cells that is neither embryonic, nor adult.
09:17 AM on 09/10/2010
Today is turning out to be a good day for science, reason, and equality
07:31 AM on 09/10/2010
Cure to Parkinson's? OBSTRUCT! OBSTRUCT!
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Titus
Bourbon, no ice
07:09 AM on 09/10/2010
Well, it's a start in the right direction.
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nirek
Proud progressive Vietnam vet. against WAR
07:08 AM on 09/10/2010
Seems to me that the courts are starting to make some good rulings.
Stem cell research back on! And DADT ruled unconstitutional !

These two rulings are a good start!

Nirek ☮ ☮
05:49 AM on 09/10/2010
Why are many referring to this Item as Stem cell research?
Feeling just a touch guilty that it is Embryonic Stem Cell Research that we are talking about.

The use of adult stem cells is actually showing more promise (and at the moment it just promise for all types of this activity) than embryonic stem cells without any ethical or moral issues.
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VeryGrood
only class worse than micro-bio was molecular-bio
07:48 AM on 09/10/2010
No... because this ban didn't solely target Embryonic Stem Cells... it targeted embryonic stem cell lines too. These are immortalized cell lines that were created, using private funding, from embryonic stem cells. These things propagate forever.... and don't require any government funded destruction of an embryo.

I don't really know if your last statement is correct but I can assure you that "showing more promise" should never result in abandoning the second best option. If you put all your eggs in 1 basket, they all end up with salmonella.
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05:45 AM on 09/10/2010
GREED BANS STEM CELL RESERCH
For the last seven years doctors in India have been using stem cell surgery to reconnect nerves that were destroyed and are curing thousands of paralyzed patents within a few months with implanted stem cells.

In India, Doctors have even developed a medical procedure where they can reproduce stem cells from one single fetus and cured thousands of s patient using only one single fetus.

The American Medical Society is so powerful politically in the USA that they are banning stem cell research in this country because curing terminally debilitated patients would radically reduce the number of patients and reduce the need for many profitable pain drugs.

A great medical eye opener and adventure autobiographical treatise by Dr. Paul Brand, "The Gift of Pain".
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EthicalJournalist
08:00 AM on 09/10/2010
Thank you for this. Who knew? I have lots of words to describe the US medical establishment, the least objectionable of which is scoundrels.

Will look for that treatise, too.
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PeteLeS
05:31 AM on 09/10/2010
The serious problem is our conservative judiciary, who have connections with our religious nuttwads. They just don't get the idea that a cell is not a life, BUT can be stimulated in becoming one. They consider ALL life special except the life that is alive. These alive people with life threatening problems are of no concern to our conservative judiciary. Just these cells that can be stimulated into life, But are not yet alive. Is there not ANY intelligent life on our judiciary???
06:38 AM on 09/10/2010
"These alive people with life threatening problems are of no concern to our conservative judiciary."

Anyone mention Adult stem cell research? Nuttwad, back to you
05:05 AM on 09/10/2010
What if they gave a war, and nobody came?...

What if everybody opposing stem cell research got alzheimer's, and forgot to oppose it?...
06:22 AM on 09/10/2010
And you can give us an assurance that embryonic stem cell research will lead to a cure of Alzheimer's disease?
09:15 AM on 09/10/2010
I can assure you that notdoing research, embryonic or otherwise, will lead to no cure
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dylbud
02:51 AM on 09/10/2010
Something is seriously wrong with our judicial system, when every decision made is overturned by the next court up, then overturned back again at the next one up after that. It's like playing eenie-meenie-miny-mo...if you start at on the right one, you can assure yourself a win when you get to the very end.
06:24 AM on 09/10/2010
Rather it shows the amount of interpretation going on, and consequently the impact of the political leaning of the judges.
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dylbud
12:58 PM on 09/10/2010
Judges' political leanings shouldn't have an impact. That's the point. That's why I say something is seriously wrong.

Btw, I certainly applaud this decision, but have no faith that it won't be overturned higher up.
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Amalek
Highly decorated HP warrior
02:19 AM on 09/10/2010
The Republican's get control of the house and the war on science will be relentless.  America is rapidly heading for its dark ages.
06:27 AM on 09/10/2010
Thank you Amalek for your inaccurate prediction.

Is that war like the de-funding of one branch of stem cell research, supported by GWB, and struck down by executive order as one of President Obama's first actions?
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VeryGrood
only class worse than micro-bio was molecular-bio
07:55 AM on 09/10/2010
The republican funding of science is substantially lower than that of the democrats.
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azind
02:16 AM on 09/10/2010
The Democrats should push this hard as a clear reminder of the real consequences of a return to Republican control of Congress. The fact that the Democrats didn't address this sooner is an example of why their supporters lack enthusiasm but the alternative is just too horrible to consider.
06:31 AM on 09/10/2010
1) the original ruling pointed out that the Obama Executive Order was illegal as Congress had already a law in place.
2) staying that ruling shows the amount of politics in the judicial system. And frankly arrogance as the Congressional action ALWAYS trumps an Executive Order
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DanoX
I'll be your snack-pack baby!
02:06 AM on 09/10/2010
ACK! Science! Get it off, get it off! May the Flying Spaghetti Monster show no mercy to these mortals who try to investigate his mysteries! Poor conservatives want it soo badly to be 1810 instead of 2010. Conservatives should rightly be call regressionists from hence forth.
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GrownupStewie
01:52 AM on 09/10/2010
future generations are going to look back and go "wow i cant believe it took that long to do something so important!"...they will pity the people who live today, they will say to their children "aren't you glad we have stem cell funding and research today? because of it we cured _____".

they will also look back and say similar things about gay rights
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theprez21
I like sarcasm
11:56 PM on 09/09/2010
Good news. Less jobs (research) now being shipped overseas.
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01:19 AM on 09/10/2010
It is part of the deal that the funding will stay in the US?

I hope so.