Monday, August 20, 2007

California company claims to give parents an option for in vitro extra embryos

"False hope" and "hot air"


After contracting for in vitro fertilization, medical consumers have typically been offered three options for stranded embryonic children who were not implanted into their mothers' wombs. They could donate them to other in vitro fertilization consumers, "volunteer" them as subjects for human experimentation, or kill them.

Now, a California company is generating controversy for a new plan which proposes killing a couple's "extra" human embryos to create "personalized" stem cell cures. And according to ABC News, this plan is drawing criticism from an unlikely source -- embryonic stem cell research backers, who say it is misleading clients.

Read this strange story here: California Catholic Daily


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"In Cordibus Jesu et Mariae"