• Scientist Phil L'Huillier who is heading the project, say's the first two or three years will be spent putting transgenic embryos into cows and breeding from them to produce transgenic calves which will in turn breed to produce herds of up to 30 animals for milking. (jesus-is-savior.com)
  • Results Chemicals screening process with zebrafish transgenic lines To be able to test the consequences of various substances on zebrafish transgenic embryos, we've selected six known EDCs (TBBPA, atrazine, methoxychlor, CdCl2, DEHP, chlordecone). (thetechnoant.info)
  • In January 2019, scientists in China reported the creation of five identical cloned gene-edited monkeys, using the same cloning technique that was used with Zhong Zhong and Hua Hua, and the same gene-editing CRISPR-Cas9 technique allegedly used by He Jiankui in creating the first ever gene-modified human babies Lulu and Nana. (wikipedia.org)
  • Inevitably most people will remember him for Dolly the sheep although his recent work was focused on fundamental and applied stem cell research as a tool for the study of human disease. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • Currently the use of human embryonic stem cells requires the destruction of an embryo, or therapeutic cloning. (tjc-global.com)
  • Government funding supporting human embryonic stem cell research varies enormously between countries, normally as a reflection of the activity of anti-stem cell research protestation, or of the influence of religion within the country. (tjc-global.com)
  • The first time that the NIH (National Institutes of Health) was able to directly fund human embryonic research was in 1993, when Bill Clinton oversaw the signing in of the National Institutes of Health Revitalisation Act. (tjc-global.com)
  • In 1995, Bill Clinton also signed in the Dickey Amendment, which prevented the use of state-allocated funds for research involving either the creation or destruction of human embryos. (tjc-global.com)
  • This allowed the use of federal funds to back research using human embryonic stem cells for the first time, and was endorsed by Bill Clinton. (tjc-global.com)
  • Research was now beginning into methods of generating stem cells that did not require the creation or destruction of a human embryo. (tjc-global.com)
  • generated the first human embryonic stem cells without the destruction of a human embryo. (tjc-global.com)
  • Such cells are derived from human embryos, and are undifferentiated, unlike other specialized cells in the human body. (nhsjs.com)
  • Proponents of stem cell research claim that the blastocyst is not human yet, and the embryos used for stem cell harvest are typically leftover from in vitro fertilization procedures with minimal chance that a human could ever develop from them. (nhsjs.com)
  • Adversaries of stem cell research argue that embryos are human and destroying one is equal to murdering a child. (nhsjs.com)
  • There are many types of stem cells, but most of the controversy surrounds embryonic stem cells, as they are derived from human embryos. (nhsjs.com)
  • Proponents, on the other hand, believe that embryos have not yet been guaranteed their human rights because they are only blastocysts, and the benefits of such research outweigh the concerns. (nhsjs.com)
  • Judging by the successful growth of the combined human-cow clone creation it appears that cow mitochondria may well be compatible with human embryonic development. (globalchange.com)
  • Elsewhere on this site I describe my own conversations with a British scientist in the 1980s who was attempting then to clone human embryos - with some success. (globalchange.com)
  • Some people are very uneasy about creating a human embryo and then dismembering it, however early the stage, to obtain embryonic stem cells from which useful tissues might be grown. (globalchange.com)
  • Called the biogenetic law, this belief concluded that all embryos always rapidly pass through their evolutionary history, starting with the one cell stage, then in the case of humans developing into the fish stage, the reptile stage, the mammal stage, ape stage, and finally into a human-child stage. (creationresearch.org)
  • His current research focus is on the study of the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans. (a-star.edu.sg)
  • The research project is planning to put human genes into cows so that their milk is more like human breast milk. (jesus-is-savior.com)
  • Researchers there are working on technology that induces human skin cells to change into the kind of stem cells that have been created by embryos. (cbc.ca)
  • Opponents argue that any embryo has the potential to develop into a mature human. (cbc.ca)
  • In a study published in the online journal Nature on March 1, 2009, Canadian researches described a new method for generating stem cells from adult human tissue. (cbc.ca)
  • There are several other Indonesian groups sympathetic to the plight of Papuans, in particular human rights organisations, one of the most prominent being the Institute for Policy Research and Advocacy (ELSAM). (greenleft.org.au)
  • While these human rights institutions concentrate on research and advocacy, SAP has concentrated on public protest actions. (greenleft.org.au)
  • American feminists and women's health activists are debating on the difficult issue of human cloning and stem cell research. (boloji.com)
  • Human cloning involves creating embryos with the intent of implanting them in women to produce children. (boloji.com)
  • The bill also applies Federal ethical regulations on human subject research and outlaws the transfer of cloned embryos to a woman's uterus or to any artificial womb. (boloji.com)
  • At the same time, the statement calls for a five-year moratorium on the use of cloning to create human embryos for research purposes. (boloji.com)
  • During one recent meeting, scientists disagreed on such basic issues as whether it would be unethical for a human embryo to begin its development in an animal's womb, and whether a mouse would be better or worse off with a brain made of human neurons. (real-agenda.com)
  • If you cannot or do not want to get into the heavy research, I am about to give you a detailed report on the state of genetic engineering, human-animal cloning and gene splicing. (real-agenda.com)
  • That's why Father Pacholczyk, director of education at the National Catholic Bioethics Center in Philadelphia, said that the efforts to help people understand the immorality of embryo reserch, including human cloning, must focus on humanizing the issue and appreciating our own embryonic origins, not just on the desired results of embryonic or other types of stem-cell research. (archstl.org)
  • A decade later, cloning came to the forefront in Missouri with the narrow passage of Amendment 2, a ballot initiative in 2006 that constitutionally protects embryonic stem-cell research and human cloning. (archstl.org)
  • The Catholic Church has always held that stem-cell research and therapies are morally acceptable, as long as they don't involve the creation and destruction of human embryos. (archstl.org)
  • The National Institutes of Health defines a human embryo as "the developing organism from the time of fertilization until the end of the eighth week of gestation. (archstl.org)
  • In addition, Chinese scientists claim to have been cloning human embryos (using rabbit eggs and human DNA) since 1999 - two years before U.S. researchers accomplished this ghastly feat using only human materials - reportedly for the purposes of isolating stem cells and possibly harvesting spare organs and tissues. (thenewatlantis.com)
  • Fr Fleming was speaking about the rights of the unborn under international law, the pro-life battle at the UN and the nature of the early human embryo. (blogspot.com)
  • He presented some of the latest research on the biochemistry of the human embryo in relationship with the mother and then tied this in to the philosophical question of the status of the embryo, dealing with such hoary chestnuts as twinning and the differentiation of cells in the embryo. (blogspot.com)
  • The signatories include human-biology research scientists, obstetricians, gynaecologists, professors of a range of disciplines, doctors in general practice and nurses. (blogspot.com)
  • They have joined together to declare the truth about the human embryo. (blogspot.com)
  • We, in our capacity as members of society who undertake scientific discovery and deliberate on scientific knowledge, herein pledge to respect the inherent rights of human embryos and foetuses during our quest for beneficial knowledge, just as we respect the inviolable and inalienable rights of children and adults. (blogspot.com)
  • It also says: "We request the removal of all existing permissions and practices that enable negative discrimination against human embryos and foetuses. (blogspot.com)
  • Chief among these are the legalisation of abortion and approval for research that harms or destroys human embryos. (blogspot.com)
  • Most of the research concerning human health is best done in animal models that can not be replaced by micro-organisms and invitro testing. (assignology.com)
  • Medical practices and research involving human subjects are aimed at improving the prophylactic, diagnosis and the therapeutic index alongside understanding the pathogenesis of the disease. (assignology.com)
  • Medical research implies that any involvement of human subjects should be based on valid and adequate information with laboratory and prior animal experimentation that has confirmed the tests as well as any subsequent procedures to be safe. (assignology.com)
  • More dramatic changes in the surface proteins of influenza viruses, through mutation of nonhuman (e.g., avian or swine) viruses or reassortment of human and nonhuman viruses, result in the creation of novel human subtypes (termed antigenic shift). (cdc.gov)
  • Professor Campbell was a cell biologist/embryologist with a research career spanning more than 30 years, the majority of which was in the field of cell growth and differentiation. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • They can be used to research normal controls for cell growth and differentiation, which may lead to a better understanding of disease in which these processes have been altered. (tjc-global.com)
  • However, the removal of embryonic stem cells destroys the early embryo. (nhsjs.com)
  • They will then use marsupial-specific assisted reproductive technologies to create an embryo that will be implanted into an artificial womb or surrogate. (improvethenews.org)
  • Some argue that the possibility of mimicking stem cells without acquiring them from embryos, side-steps that moral dilemma. (cbc.ca)
  • When people argue that the embryo is too small to consider its humanity, Father Pacholczyk, a neuroscientist and theologian, uses an analogy of a bomber plane flying high in the sky. (archstl.org)
  • What experiments were completed in 1996, 1997 and 1998 that we won't know about until 1999 to 2001 - if then? (globalchange.com)
  • In 1999-2001, during the presidency of Abdurahman Wahid, considerable political space was opened up in Papua. (greenleft.org.au)
  • In 2001, Chinese researchers grew dog bladder tissue on the back of a mouse - a freakish bio-engineering "success" performed in a military medical research institute. (thenewatlantis.com)
  • As PhD students, we found it difficult to access the research we needed, so we decided to create a new Open Access publisher that levels the playing field for scientists across the world. (intechopen.com)
  • If the Chinese attempt biotech research that Western scientists now avoid for ethical or legal reasons, competitive motivations - the lust for fame and fortune, personal and national - may erode the ethical and legal limits in the West, too. (thenewatlantis.com)
  • Since 1999, Australian scientists have hoped to bring back what was once the country's top predator. (improvethenews.org)
  • Adversaries support that it is unethical to destroy an embryo and is, in religious terms, a sin. (nhsjs.com)
  • However, the Senate bill does allow for therapeutic cloning, known as 'nuclear transplantation', for research on therapies that could cure several serious and life-threatening diseases. (boloji.com)
  • The Society for Women's Health Research, a non-profit group, agrees that therapeutic cloning should be allowed. (boloji.com)
  • While supporting research that would help to determine whether stem cells have therapeutic effects, they point out that those adult stem cells, umbilical cord stem cells, and embryonic stem cells not derived from embryos created for research can be used. (boloji.com)
  • The potential therapeutic use of stem cells has been broadly researched in recent years. (bvsalud.org)
  • In that procedure, the nucleus from a cell derived from an embryo, a fetus, or tissue of an adult is inserted. (icr.org)
  • Embryonic stem cells come from embryos, embryonic germ cells from testes, and adult stem cells can come from bone marrow. (cbc.ca)
  • This new method of generating stem cells does not require embryos as starting points and could be used to generate cells from many adult tissues, such as a patient's own skin cells,' said principal author Andras Nagy, senior investigator at Mount Sinai's Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute. (cbc.ca)
  • The Church also supports research and therapies using adult stem cells, which are cells that come from any person who has been born - including umbilical cord blood, bone marrow, skin and other organs. (archstl.org)
  • Stem cells are classified into two main: embryonic stem cells, which are found in the embryos and adult stem cells, found in adult tissues. (bvsalud.org)
  • In the last 40 years, stem cell research has formed an exciting new avenue for treatment for many different types of disease, from leukaemia to cystic fibrosis. (tjc-global.com)
  • Stem cell research represents one of the most polarized biomedical controversies of our time. (nhsjs.com)
  • Considering the great potential of embryonic stem cell research, it is argued here that their research be allowed to be legal, federally funded, and its development a national priority. (nhsjs.com)
  • Stem cell research is one of the most controversial issues in modern medicine. (nhsjs.com)
  • The controversy over embryonic stem cell research is caused by the fact that the procurement of these stem cells involves the destruction of the embryo produced during in vitro fertilization. (nhsjs.com)
  • In the United States currently embryonic stem cell research is allowed but there has been a lot of public controversy and legal setbacks. (nhsjs.com)
  • Two bills were proposed: The first one was the Stem Cell Research Advancement Act, which passed in both the House of Representatives and the Senate but was vetoed by President George W. Bush. (nhsjs.com)
  • This newer bill calls for prioritizing federally assisted advancement of embryonic stem cell research ( 1). (nhsjs.com)
  • Additionally, there have been two executive orders focusing on embryonic stem cells, one released by President George W. Bush prohibiting embryonic stem cell research and related federal funding, the other by President Barack Obama reversing the previous order but still with restrictions in place ( 2). (nhsjs.com)
  • This showcases the ambivalence of public perception, policy and legislation about stem cell research. (nhsjs.com)
  • In December 1999, the editors of Science, the journal devoted to scientific and medical matters, called stem cell research the 'Breakthrough of the Year. (cbc.ca)
  • Since then, there has been a flurry of announcements about developments in stem cell research and hints of promising treatments for diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and cancer. (cbc.ca)
  • In May 2007, Ontario and California announced a $30-million stem cell research deal aimed at finding new therapies for those diseases. (cbc.ca)
  • Ontario and California together account for about 70 per cent of the stem cell research currently conducted in North America. (cbc.ca)
  • Some of that money would be aimed at turning the state into the second-largest stem cell research region in the United States. (cbc.ca)
  • The full spectrum of the life science industry - from drug discovery and development to biomanufacturing, stem cell research, bioinformatics, neuroscience, cancer research, genomics, and proteomics - can be found within Scotland's borders. (biopharminternational.com)
  • They took a cell from Dr Jose Cibelli, a research scientist and combined it with a cows egg from which the genes had already been removed. (globalchange.com)
  • He holds adjunct appointments at 1) Department of Biochemistry (NUS) 2) Cancer Science Institute, 3) Singapore Eye Research Institute and 4) National Cancer Centre, Singapore. (a-star.edu.sg)
  • In 1966, his final year at Nottingham, he received a scholarship to conduct research for a summer under English biologist Ernest John Christopher Polge in the Unit of Reproductive Physiology and Biochemistry, then a division of the Agricultural Research Council at the University of Cambridge. (mathisfunforum.com)
  • Even if all the data point to an intelligent designer," wrote Kansas State University biologist Scott Todd in 1999, "such an hypothesis is excluded from science because it is not naturalistic. (discovery.org)
  • Our research also establishes zebrafish transgenic lines as effective tools to display screen for rapid screening process small substances and their results on advancement. (thetechnoant.info)
  • Because we targeted to describe fresh results elicited by these substances on the advancement of zebrafish embryo, we've chosen a big selection of concentrations from 1 nM to 10 M. We examined these substances on seven transgenic lines that represent the vascular (arteries), digestive (pancreas, liver organ, pharyngeal teeth) and anxious systems (internal hearing) (Desk 1). (thetechnoant.info)
  • He worked for a couple of years in the pharmaceutical industry as Clinical Research Associate on both Immune System and Central Nervous System. (humanitad.org)
  • The tissues that used to be discarded may now serve as a basis for scientific research and clinical use in tissue regeneration and treatment of many diseases 23 . (bvsalud.org)
  • Following two postdoctoral positions he joined the Roslin Institute in Scotland in 1991, where he applied his previous experience to the production of mammalian embryos by nuclear transfer. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • Installed in a building ceded by the Nuclear Energy Research Institute (Ipen), on the University of São Paulo (USP) campus, the Cietec is following a common line of a large part of the incubators spread throughout the country. (fapesp.br)
  • He sums up the cost of new technologies saying, we only have to reflect on DDT, nuclear power, and CFCs, which were hailed as wonderful creations but whose long-term detrimental effects were only found decades after their widespread use. (jesus-is-savior.com)
  • The Society is concerned that a ban on nuclear transplantation might thwart research directed at finding cures and treatments for diseases and disabilities which solely, predominantly or differently affect women,' says their president, Phyllis Greenberger. (boloji.com)
  • The source of embryos is from those fertilized in vitro , and then donated for research with donor consent. (nhsjs.com)
  • She is the first "cloned" primate by artificial twinning, which is a much less complex procedure than the DNA transfer used for the creation of Zhong Zhong and Hua Hua. (wikipedia.org)
  • Forbes v. Napolitano (2000) was a US court case that established that Arizona researchers could use fetal tissues from induced abortions for basic scientific research, for instance, as a source of stem cells. (asu.edu)
  • By making research easy to access, and puts the academic needs of the researchers before the business interests of publishers. (intechopen.com)
  • If the origin of life "remains a vigorous area of research," it is only because origin-of-life researchers are dedicated to their work, not because they have discovered anything that demonstrates how life originated. (iconsofevolution.com)
  • 3 Though it was banned from use in pregnant women, publications demonstrating its utility as a treatment for erythema nodosum leprosum began to crop up in the mid-1990s and research on the drug has since exploded - especially within the past ten years. (emra.org)
  • Darwin's followers now claim that they have "overwhelming evidence" for their theory, but despite 150 years of research no one has ever observed the origin of a new species by natural selection-much less the origin of new organs and body plans. (discovery.org)
  • Yue Wang obtained his PhD from the University of Minnesota in 1988 and then undertook postdoctoral research in the same university for one and a half years. (a-star.edu.sg)
  • When I first began my research into genetically engineered food, I was horrified to find that for years we have been part of an experiment we have not consented to. (jesus-is-savior.com)
  • In 15 years of research I have not been able to get a significant grasp on what genetically engineering humans, fish, soy, corn, milk and other products could mean for humankind. (real-agenda.com)
  • On Aug. 16, Colossal announced that its second de-extinction project will be the thylacine, and, through $10 million in funding over the next three years, it will be supercharging Pask's research, helping to further develop technologies necessary to resurrect the tiger. (cnet.com)
  • He ran his own house building company for several years before permanently exiting the world of commerce altogether following significant research into the fundamental tenets of the existing financial and political paradigm, which he could no longer in good conscience continue to be a part of. (humanitad.org)
  • By 2003, the goal was reached: the country's biotech community currently employs 26,000 people (up from 12,000 just four years ago) in over 500 organizations, and the biotechnology community's average yearly growth has been more than 20% during the period from 1999 to 2003. (biopharminternational.com)
  • In zebrafish, for instance, BPA treatments began prior 22 hours post-fertilization (hpf) result in 85C100% of otolith flaws, while treatment began after 22 hpf usually do not influence embryos. (thetechnoant.info)
  • No matter what we do to the genes of a fruit fly embryo, there are only three possible outcomes: a normal fruit fly, a defective fruit fly or a dead fruit fly. (discovery.org)
  • For decades creationists have been using the word "kind," "type," or "group" for their envisioned categories of genetically unrelated organisms including all those formed by the Creator during Creation Week. (creationresearch.org)
  • A case is implicated where Ashkensai Jews are known to have a high genetic predisposition to conditions like Tay Sachs, Gaucher, and BRCs.If an arkensai Jew is asked to consent on this for a medical research undertaking there is a possibility that he/she will refuse for the fear of being termed as genetically defective. (assignology.com)
  • Professor Campbell was instrumental in the creation of Dolly the Sheep, the first cloned mammal, a breakthrough which paved the way for the successful cloning of many other mammal species. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • The growing numbers of micro and small companies incubators here in Brazil, is becoming the main source for the transfer of technology produced in university laboratories and research centers to products and services market. (fapesp.br)
  • Of the total number of incubators, 57% maintain formal links with universities and research centers and 20 % informal links. (fapesp.br)
  • The spaces are ceded by universities, research centers and cities. (fapesp.br)
  • The funding source was the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Division of Parasitic Diseases and Malaria through a cooperative agreement with Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), Center for Global Health Research (CGHR), Kisumu, Kenya. (cdc.gov)
  • Outcomes and Discussion Appearance of BMP signalling elements Whole support in situ hybridisation for in mouse embryos at E9.5 revealed intense mRNA 638-94-8 expression, specifically inside the VER (Shape 1a-c). (bioshockinfinitereleasedate.com)
  • Our outcomes present that EDCs can induce a big selection of developmental modifications during embryogenesis of zebrafish and create GFP transgenic lines as effective tools to display screen for EDCs results embryos [15]. (thetechnoant.info)
  • Furthermore, exposures of embryos to EDCs can possess different outcomes compared to the publicity of adults. (thetechnoant.info)
  • Recording and contextualizing the science of embryos, development, and reproduction. (asu.edu)
  • He serves on Editorial Boards of 1) Science Advances, 2) Molecular and Cellular Biology (American Society for Microbiology), 3) Biochemical Journal (Portland Press) 4) Critical Reviews in Oncology/Hematology (Elsevier Press), 5) BMC Research Notes (Biomed Central) and 6) Telomeres and Telomerase. (a-star.edu.sg)
  • In 1999, Scotland's main economic development agency, Scottish Enterprise, pledged to double the country's biotech community and create Europe's leading biotechnology region by utilizing Scotland's academic science departments, research institutes, hospitals, and large and small biotech companies. (biopharminternational.com)
  • Professor Sir Ian Wilmut, who worked with Professor Campbell on the creation of Dolly the Sheep, said: "Always cheerful and friendly, Keith will be greatly missed by all of his friends and colleagues. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • For example, Campbell, Reece and Mitchell's Biology (5th Edition, 1999), one of the most widely used introductory textbooks for college undergraduates, discusses the Miller-Urey experiment in "Unit Five: The Evolutionary History of Biological Diversity. (iconsofevolution.com)
  • The development of new biomaterials for tissue engineering provides a scientific basis for the creation of scaffolds that could provide appropriate regeneration and tissue repair 14 . (bvsalud.org)
  • He joined the University of Nottingham in 1999 as Professor of Animal Development in the School of Biosciences. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • In 1999 he was tempted into academia by an offer from the University of Nottingham as Professor of Animal Development. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • An embryo in its first days of development is no bigger than a period at the end of a sentence, Father Pacholczyk often points out. (archstl.org)
  • Determined to seize upon the next commercially lucrative technology revolution, the leadership in Beijing began to ramp up biotech research and development. (thenewatlantis.com)
  • ITI Life Sciences will identify, commission, and manage research and development projects in emerging technologies across the broad spectrum of life sciences. (biopharminternational.com)
  • Dr. M. L. Madan, a distinguished Agriculture and Animal scientist, an accomplished research manager and an internationally recognized Biotechnologist. (edu.in)
  • In May 2002, the Senate countered with its own legislation designed to foster scientific research. (boloji.com)
  • Researches and practices in the medical field unveil new drugs, forms of treatment, and disease prevention measures. (assignology.com)
  • Your donation helps us continue to provide world-class research in defense of life. (lozierinstitute.org)
  • The intellectual assets generated by these research projects will be used to increase the strength and sustainability of life sciences companies and organizations based in Scotland. (biopharminternational.com)
  • Origin-of-life remains a vigorous area of research. (iconsofevolution.com)
  • While, in theory, this is exciting research, there's a lack of consideration for the many technical, ethical, and ecological challenges, such as the welfare of the animals, which would be subjected to a life in captivity before an uncertain reintroduction into the wild. (improvethenews.org)
  • During his graduate studies he was awarded an international cancer society (UICC) fellowship for collaborative research at Tufts University, Boston, USA. (a-star.edu.sg)
  • Scotland's greatest strength may lie in its unparalleled university research capabilities that have produced a test bed for innovation. (biopharminternational.com)
  • The company, which is also attempting to restore the wooly mammoth, will be working alongside the Thylacine Integrated Genetic Restoration Research Lab at the University of Melbourne. (improvethenews.org)
  • In order to gain insight in to the elements managing Bmp2 signalling in the VER, we've researched the mRNA appearance of Bmp2 signalling elements, alongside the proteins and mRNA appearance patterns of most known laminin stores, in the tail-bud from the mouse embryo. (bioshockinfinitereleasedate.com)
  • The organization reserves the right to ascertain the source of funding alongside monitoring the progress of the research. (assignology.com)
  • The biotech industry wants it all kept quiet as they push products onto the market with unprecedented speed to recoup their billions of dollars in accumulated genetic research and investment costs. (jesus-is-savior.com)
  • So the question now arises: With China conducting cutting edge biotech experiments, what limitations will be placed on research there? (thenewatlantis.com)
  • Cheap whole-genome sequencing is of greatest importance to medical scientific research. (nature.com)
  • His research blossomed after he came to Roslin Institute where in a series of papers he put the intellectual framework into the method of mammalian cloning that ultimately led to the birth of Dolly in 1996. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • Much of this research was presented and discussed at the annual meeting of the International Embryo Transfer Society where he will be remembered as an enthusiastic participant in discussions on current topics. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • After his research and Download on the transfer, he Did increased scientifically, with no many something, in an seperate film which did later required. (koslowski-design.de)
  • The ITIs encourage membership by companies and other organizations by providing members with valuable market intelligence and the opportunity to influence the research agenda. (biopharminternational.com)
  • I thought then, that the most appealing way to start off was to simply provide the headlines of some of the articles and documents I found during my research process, so that the readers had an immediate notion of what genetic engineering really means and how it affects them directly now and how it will affect them in the future. (real-agenda.com)
  • The growing use of emergency contraception has helped bolster a movement to give pharmacists the right to refuse to fill prescriptions, for this drug and for others (" Objections, Confusion Among Pharmacists Threaten Access to Emergency Contraception ," TGR, June 1999, page 1). (guttmacher.org)
  • The main difficulty was likely the proper programming of the transferred nuclei to support the growth of the embryo. (wikipedia.org)
  • In a country unused to carrying out research in companies, the 35% growth in the number of installed incubators, between July of 1999 and this June, is without doubt excellent news. (fapesp.br)
  • Maybe you think they are only held at research labs that belong to pharmaceutical corporations or public and private universities. (real-agenda.com)