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| What the Media Won’t Tell You About Stem Cell Research
The debate over stem cell research is raging across the nation and echoing through chambers of Congress and state legislatures. Most people have heard just enough to offer an opinion to friends and neighbors; yet, the information they receive is incomplete and often inaccurate. Every new study about embryonic stem cells produces an onslaught of optimistic articles confidently proclaiming that with just a little more time and a lot more public money, embryonic stem cells will provide cures for dozens of diseases and hope for millions of sick patients. Meanwhile, stories highlighting adult stem cell successes seem less optimistic and much less prominent. Casual observers might reasonably conclude that embryonic stem cells hold the most promise while adult stem cells are of secondary interest. They would be wrong. Embryonic stem cells are often touted as the most promising research option because they are a "blank slate" capable of differentiating (changing and specializing) into all the cells of the body. Less well known is that adult stem cells also have the ability to change into every kind of cell, tissue and organ in the body. Yes, you read that correctly: One of the main reasons embryonic stem cells are flaunted as the gold standard in research is their ability to change into every cell type. Yet, adult stem cells have the same capacity.
Read more about this topic in the Bioethics/Sanctity of Life section of www.focusonsocialissues.org.
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