Opinion: Learning from stem cell stumbles
By Jesse Reynolds,
San Diego Union Tribune
| 01. 27. 2006
The leaders of California's ambitious stem cell research program should closely read the news of the last couple months. A scandal including fraud, lies and cover-ups has ended the careers of scientists in South Korea, including Hwang Woo-suk, one of the prominent stem cell scientists in the world.
Hwang's American collaborators are now under investigation at their own universities. One of them, Jose Cibelli, sat on the committee developing research standards for California's program. Although Cibelli has voluntarily withdrawn from his activities, he did so only last week, two months into the scandal.
It is now clear that Hwang's groundbreaking announcements of the last two years were almost entirely fabricated. What's more, he obtained thousands of eggs from women in a variety of unethical and illegal ways.
Many commentators initially downplayed the relevance of the scandal, framing it as a single rotten apple in a distant foreign barrel. But that's not the case.
The stem cell research atmospheres in South Korea and America - especially California - are quite similar. There's nothing that happened there that can't happen here.
First...
Related Articles
By Emma McDonald Kennedy
| 11.24.2024
Gig work in childcare, nursing, and transportation; non-invasive prenatal testing; gene editing; and space expeditions can all be attributed to one mistaken, pervasive assumption: that “we can innovate our way out of the thorniest problems, including reproductive ones” (22). In Reproductive Labor and Innovation: Against the Tech Fix in an Era of Hype, feminist political theorist Jennifer Denbow demonstrates why the U.S. has put so much of its hopes, and its money, on technological “innovations”––and why that hasn’t addressed...
By Tamsin Metelerkamp, Daily Maverick | 11.18.2024
The National Health Research Ethics Council (NHREC) has confirmed that heritable human genome editing (HHGE) remains illegal in South Africa, after changes in the latest version of the South African Ethics in Health Research Guidelines sparked concern among researchers that...
By Bernice Lottering, Gene Online | 11.08.2024
South Africa’s updated health-research ethics guidelines, which now include heritable human genome editing, have sparked concern among scientists. The revisions, made in May but only recently gaining attention, outline protocols for modifying genetic material in sperm, eggs, or embryos—changes that...
By Arwa Mahdawi, The Guardian | 11.19.2024
Photo "Elon Musk Presenting Tesla's Fully Autonomous Future" by Steve Jurvetson on Flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
Is Elon Musk the dinner party guest from hell? It sure seems that way. Not only is the man desperate for people to...