Search     for          [ Advanced Search ]


    Browse   Add Article/Listing   What's Top   What's New   Featured   Tell a Friend   FAQ



  Categories

    News (990)
    Jobs & Resumes (51)
    Image Database (209)
    IVF Mail (660)
    Reviews (65)
    Links (103)
    Books & Videos (49)
    Clinics (231)
    Embryology courses (33)
    Tutorials (8)
    IVF Podcasts (13)


  Sponsors

1.  ac-tive (IVF)
2.  CRi (Oosight)
3.  Cryolock
4.  Hamilton Thorne Research
5.  IVFonline
6.  MediCult
7.  Mellowood Medical Clinic Software
8.  Research Instruments
9.  Zander IVF


  Clinic Sponsors

1.  Jinemed Hospital, Turkey


  Featured Listings


Human Preimplantation Embryo Selection


Handbook of the Assisted Reproduction Laboratory


  Recently Viewed

1.  US bioethics Council releases ART recommendations
2.  Advanced Workshop in Preimplantation Genetics
3.  Warming of vitrified blastocysts and D2 embryos
4.  WiCell adds training session
5.  Ultrasound Scan
6.  UK's IVF pioneer receives lifetime achievement award
7.  Vitrification workshop 2nd annoucement
8.  Three cases show parenthood rules need revising
9.  What clinics want from regulation
10.  vitrification


  IVF Journals



  IVF Support

1.  Resolve
2.  Infertility Network UK
3.  American Infertility Association
4.  Fertile Hope
5.  Egg Freezing
6.  Fertility Connect
7.  e-Infertility Network
8.  INCIID
9.  NISIG – Ireland


  IVF Tutorials

 
IVF


IVF > News

US bioethics Council releases ART recommendations

Dr. Kirsty Horsey
Progress Educational Trust
02 April 2004
Discuss this article Read comments Add to favorites

[BioNews, London] President Bush's Council on Bioethics has released wide-ranging recommendations calling for greater regulation of assisted reproductive technology (ART). The report, entitled 'Reproduction and Responsibility: The Regulation of the New Biotechnologies', advises that the American federal government should become more involved in the regulation of fertility clinics. It says the fertility business is rapidly increasing in the US, but at present is largely unregulated.

The recommendations were originally released in draft form in November 2003, and the final wording of the draft version was approved in January 2004, after some amendments. They form part of the Council's continuing project on 'US Biotechnology and Public Policy and the Biotechnologies Touching the Beginnings of Human Life', which began more than a year ago and is looking at a wide range of issues in assisted reproduction 'from consumer protection to research regulation'. The latest recommendations form the final version of the report that will be sent to the President for approval.

In the report, the Council also says that Congress should, for the moment, set aside the divisive issue of human embryo cloning for research and quickly ban other embryo experiments where there is consensus that they are unethical. These include limiting research on human embryos to a maximum of 10 to 14 days after fertilisation, the creation of human-animal chimeras, transferring IVF embryos to the womb for purposes other than reproduction, creating embryos from fetal cells and gestation of human embryos in animals. It also proposes that 'attempts to conceive a child by any means other than the union of egg and sperm' should be prohibited, which would have the effect of banning human reproductive cloning. A statement from five Council members, attached to the report, says 'we believe that this language provides a way for Congress to ban reproductive cloning while agreeing to disagree on the question of cloning for biomedical research'.

The 'Reproduction and Responsibility' report also examines the converging fields of fertility treatment, human genetics and embryo research and says that the Council found an 'ethically unstructured world in which the lines between science, medicine and human experimentation are unclear'. It calls for an input of federal funds to expand data collection from fertility clinics - particularly on the use of genetic tests that can help parents select the sex and other traits of their children. These techniques involve the removal of a cell from an embryo, and the long-term consequences of this, if any, should be studied. It also calls for a long term study to help resolve lingering concerns about the health effects of various assisted reproduction techniques on patients and their offspring.

Dr Leon Kass, chair of the Council, said that it was their hope 'that public spirited members of Congress might see fit to embrace these matters', adding 'with the field moving very rapidly - and no existing oversight, never mind regulatory mechanisms, in place - I think it is urgent we set down some markers on which everyone can agree while continuing to argue about those things that still divide us'. But despite amendments made to the original wording of the report, some people remain sceptical. 'The Council appears to have struck a more balanced tone', said Pamela Madsen from the American Fertility Association, but added 'we will have to watch this very carefully' when it comes to writing legislation. A spokesperson for the American Society for Reproductive Medicine said that it was good that the original report had been altered in response to comments from patient and professional groups and that there is 'much in this report that we can support'. It was also good, they said, that some of the more 'technical' aspects had not yet been included, as even the most carefully-worded legislation could be affected in debates and end up as 'bad law'.



http://www.BioNews.org.uk
BioNews@progress.org.uk
© Copyright 2008 Progress Educational Trust

Reproduced from BioNews with permission, a web- and email-based source of news, information and comment on assisted reproduction and human genetics, published by Progress Educational Trust.


Page Views: 37

 

Average Visitor Rating:    0.00 (out of 5)
Number of Ratings: 0 Votes
Rate This Article:
 Visitor comments (0)
Discuss this article Write a comment

(No comments found. You may write the first one!)





  IVF Jobs



IVF Jobs | Resumes

Click here to post your
job announcement



  Latest Listings

1.  Obesity is not a threat to successful IVF
2.  Third Yazd International Student Award and Congress in Reproductive Medicine
3.  10th International Congress on Reproductive Biomedicine
4.  Correction - 5th Congress on Stem Cell Biology & Technology
5.  5th International Congress on Stem Cell Biology & Technology
6.  10th Royan International Research Award on Reproductive Biomedicine & Stem Cell Biotechnology
7.  Clinical Fellowship in Andrology and Reproductive Medicine


  Featured



  IVF Newsletter

Subscribe for the latest IVF news and announcements.
name
email
add   remove  


  Most Popular

1.  IVF Ethics Questionnaire [Results]
2.  Girl or boy? It's in dad's genes
3.  Fertility drugs linked to increased cancer risk
4.  Embryo quality and grading: The good, the bad or the ugly?
5.  In Vitro Fertilization
6.  Research links intelligence to sperm quality
7.  Clinical Fellowship in Andrology and Reproductive Medicine


  Talk to us



Name:  

E-mail:  



  IVF Videos

1.  Lysed Cell Removal
2.  Embryonic Division
3.  Professor Robert Edwards
4.  Embryo Metabolomics



Search Listings | Place Listings | Edit Listings | My Profile | My Favorites | Auto Notify | Sitemap | FAQ |
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Tell Your Friends | Refund Policy | ROR/RSS | Sponsorship and Advertising


embryo
Copyright © 1997-2009, IVF.net. All Rights Reserved.