- Should medical researchers be allowed to create human-animal
hybrids to investigate disease? No, says an ethics think tank that advises
the Scottish Parliament. Yes, says Ian Wilmut of the University of Edinburgh,
creator of Dolly the cloned sheep.
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- In its 8 August report, the Scottish Council on Human
Bioethics advocates banning embryos containing human and animal genetic
material and cloned embryos created by combining human cells with cow or
rabbit oocytes, something Wilmut wants to attempt in order to study motor
neurone disease.
- "There are strong moral objections to creating half-human
half-animal 'entities'"
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- "There are lots of questions relating to the status
of hybrids," says Calum MacKellar, director of research at the council,
adding that there are strong moral objections to creating half-human, half-animal
"entities".
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- Wilmut disagrees, denouncing the report as superficial,
ill-informed and unduly pessimistic. "By casting a negative light
on a number of important research opportunities, this report may limit
medical progress," he says. The outcome could be decided in October,
when the UK government is proposing new regulations on animal-human chimeras.
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- From issue 2564 of New Scientist magazine, 11 August
2006
http://www.newscientist.com/channel/opinion/mg19125646.3
00-debate-rages-over-animalhuman-chimeras.html |