• We should no longer allow abortion vendors to profit from selling the body parts of infants who did not survive a visit to Planned Parenthood," Hawkins said. (breitbart.com)
  • Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-Wash) said last year , "Treating these tiny humans like a junkyard, where groups like Planned Parenthood can scavenge for parts, is hardly the retail business anyone should want to hang a shingle over. (californiafamily.org)
  • For almost a hundred years, Planned Parenthood has addressed a vital need for women across the country, providing access to a wide array of reproductive healthcare services," said Senator Krueger, BPCLC Co-Chair. (nysbpclc.com)
  • It includes some footage from the Planned Parenthood sting videos where technicians identify fetal body parts in petri dishes. (vox.com)
  • There is additional stock footage of full fetuses - again, not shot in Planned Parenthood clinics, and also not used in the original Human Capital videos. (vox.com)
  • There is audio from a former StemExpress employee (a company Planned Parenthood contracted with to procure fetal tissue) describing her own experience with another technician: "She gave me the scissors and told me to cut down the middle of the face. (vox.com)
  • It ends with the words "This is Planned Parenthood" over a late-stage fetus who, according to the identifying information next to it, was "killed by saline abortion" at "University of Wisconsin Hospital in the 1980s. (vox.com)
  • While there is discussion from the former StemExpress employer of procuring fetal brain tissue - a practice Planned Parenthood openly admits happens in its clinics - there is no discussion of keeping a fetus alive for that purpose. (vox.com)
  • Attempting to shut down Planned Parenthood health centers in Texas is part of an extreme agenda to ban abortion, and politicians are willing to strip away access to birth control, cancer screenings, and other vital health care in the process. (dallasnews.com)
  • The eight-hour video in question showed Planned Parenthood employees at a Houston abortion clinic discussing how fetal tissue is collected for donations and used in research projects. (dallasnews.com)
  • The state claimed that Planned Parenthood was breaking the law by offering to alter abortion procedures to obtain specific quantities of tissue for research projects and that the provider was profiting from the sale of fetal tissue. (dallasnews.com)
  • Planned Parenthood officials have denied accusations that they sell fetal tissue. (dallasnews.com)
  • Stuart Bowen, inspector general for the Health and Human Services Commission, told Sparks last month that the video showed a willingness on the part of Planned Parenthood to alter procedures but that he did not have evidence of any physician actually changing an abortion. (dallasnews.com)
  • The cut-off could be delayed if the organization requests an administrative hearing with the Texas Health and Human Services Commission in the next 15 days , but Planned Parenthood officials say they will instead turn to the courts to block the cuts. (texastribune.org)
  • In the notice, Texas Health and Human Services Inspector General Stuart Bowen said the undercover videos - which depicted Planned Parenthood officials discussing the use of fetal tissue for research - showed "that Planned Parenthood violated state and federal law. (texastribune.org)
  • With a fourth House hearing on Planned Parenthood and its sale of aborted baby body parts taking place in Congress today, a conservative web site looking further into the scandal claims the Obama administration apparently is not conducting any oversight related to the abortion business' obtaining and selling body parts of aborted babies. (lifenews.com)
  • The Obama administration has steadfastly defended Planned Parenthood and its taxpayer funding throughout the scandal exposing its sales of aborted babies and their body parts for research. (lifenews.com)
  • The Obama administration has already been exposed as partnering with the middlemen who purchase aborted babies and their body parts from Planned Parenthood and other abortion clinics. (lifenews.com)
  • According to the report in Politico , one of the biotech firms mentioned in the undercover videos identified as a fetal tissue supplier Planned Parenthood sold aborted babies to earned at least $300,000 from federal governmental agencies after selling fetal tissue to them. (lifenews.com)
  • Officials say they are unsure if the specific fetal tissue sold to the Obama administration came from babies aborted at Planned Parenthood. (lifenews.com)
  • As a report in The Stream indicates: "Under the NIH Revitalization Act of 1993 , the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) should be performing audits on Planned Parenthood, since Planned Parenthood is involved in research on aborted fetuses and HHS is supporting its work with funding. (lifenews.com)
  • The Stream filed its FOIA request with the Office for Human Research Protections (OHRP) of HHS in July, asking for documents and emails related to Planned Parenthood and the audits. (lifenews.com)
  • If this is accurate, what about all the harvesting of fetal body parts that Planned Parenthood itself categorizes as research? (lifenews.com)
  • Most of the emails appear to be internal discussions about how to respond to reporters' questions about Planned Parenthood selling fetal tissue and responses to reporters - essentially coordinated talking points for damage control within various divisions of HHS and even within the FDA. (lifenews.com)
  • Many people were shocked to watch the comments by Dr. Deborah Nucatola, the Senior Director of Medical Research at Planned Parenthood, on the abortionist trafficking of the organs of unborn children (see below for the original footage). (premierchristianity.com)
  • Planned Parenthood is essentially the BPAS of the United States, being the largest member of the American abortion industry. (premierchristianity.com)
  • Many people will focus on the legal side of these revelations: whether the video shows that Planned Parenthood are breaking U.S. law against selling human fetal tissue, or at the very least the Federal regulations that prohibit altering the timing or method of an abortion for the sole purpose of later using the tissue in research. (premierchristianity.com)
  • A supporter of stem cell research who voted to legalize the use of fetal tissue for that very purpose, Senator Hatch led the bogus Republican witch hunt into Planned Parenthood in 2015. (perrspectives.com)
  • In both, representatives of CMP are negotiating to buy fetal tissue in the form of intact organs from Planned Parenthood. (powerlineblog.com)
  • Planned Parenthood has denied any wrongdoing and has denounced CMP for its campaign of "harassment" against PP. The pro-abortion lobby has fallen in behind Planned Parenthood. (powerlineblog.com)
  • A hidden-camera video released last week purported to show that Planned Parenthood illegally sells tissue from aborted fetuses. (powerlineblog.com)
  • This video, like the first one, leaves no doubt whatsoever that Planned Parenthood is in the business of selling aborted babies' organs to private firms engaged in research. (powerlineblog.com)
  • Just about anyone not already immersed in the world of abortion on demand would be appalled by the callousness on display, which is why Planned Parenthood, the New York Times and their allies are anxious to denounce and suppress the videos. (powerlineblog.com)
  • Now that its trafficking in body parts has been exposed, Planned Parenthood claims this commerce is little short of heroic: the body parts are used in ground-breaking, life-saving medical research. (powerlineblog.com)
  • Texas moved to exclude Planned Parenthood from Medicaid years ago after a highly-edited video from an anti-abortion group suggested abortion providers sold fetal tissue. (texastribune.org)
  • The case stems from a long-running flap over a misleading video released in late 2015 by the anti-abortion group Center for Medical Progress, which suggested that abortion providers at Planned Parenthood sold fetal tissue for profit. (texastribune.org)
  • The sting video included edited clips of Planned Parenthood officials discussing the use of fetal tissue for research. (texastribune.org)
  • Planned Parenthood has said repeatedly that it does not profit from tissue sales or donations. (texastribune.org)
  • The Office of Inspector General, an arm of the state's health and human services agency charged with rooting out fraud and abuse, claimed the videos "showed "that Planned Parenthood violated state and federal law. (texastribune.org)
  • By denying Medicaid patients access to the qualified provider of their choice, the state is putting Texans' health in jeopardy," said Melaney A. Linton, the president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast. (texastribune.org)
  • Twenty-one expert organizations sign on to an amicus brief for Planned Parenthood of Montana v Montana challenging three abortion restrictions passed by the legislature and signed by the governor in 2021. (societyfp.org)
  • Twenty-one expert organizations sign on to an amicus brief for Planned Parenthood of Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota v Noem challenging a South Dakota law requiring patients to visit a "Pregnancy Help Center" during the period between when they receive pre-abortion counseling from their physician and the abortion itself. (societyfp.org)
  • Examine the business practices and regulatory structure of Planned Parenthood affiliates in Texas, and investigate whether state or federal laws are being broken by Planned Parenthood and/or its affiliates in Texas in regards to the donation and/or sale of fetal tissue. (texas.gov)
  • The vote followed the release of deceptively edited videos produced by the anti-choice group Center for Medical Progress (CMP), which targeted Planned Parenthood officials and fetal tissue procurement companies. (mediamatters.org)
  • CMP has claimed that its videos show that Planned Parenthood was illegally selling fetal tissue and altering abortion procedures in order to profit from the sale of fetal tissue. (mediamatters.org)
  • CMP's deceptively edited videos have spurred at least 13 states to launch investigations into Planned Parenthood's operations, even though there are "only three states in which Planned Parenthood affiliate clinics can participate in fetal tissue donation programs," according to Yahoo News. (mediamatters.org)
  • Daleiden was also indicted on a misdemeanor charge related to his offers to Planned Parenthood officials in Texas to purchase human organs. (mediamatters.org)
  • These videos feature Planned Parenthood officials haggling over the cash value of fetal tissue and blithely talking about "crunchy" abortion procedures. (firstthings.com)
  • Planned Parenthood then takes that same "bundle of tissue" (or, to use the elegantly Orwellian term, "product of conception") and sells it to organizations which perform research on the fetal tissue. (firstthings.com)
  • At the risk of stating the obvious, these organizations only want these fetal body parts because they are human tissue, i.e. tissue belonging to a human being , the very thing Planned Parenthood is trying to convince the rest of us it's not. (firstthings.com)
  • Consider recommendations to strengthen regulations on abortion providers, including further restrictions on the sale of fetal tissue by these entities. (texas.gov)
  • Human embryonic and fetal tissues are available from the Central Laboratory for Human Embryology at the University of Washington. (blessedquietness.com)
  • In its announcement, NIH said in the near future it would be seeking grant applications for the development of "models that closely mimic and can be used to faithfully model human embryonic development or other aspects of human biology, for example, the human immune system, that do not rely on the use of human fetal tissue obtained from elective abortions. (breitbart.com)
  • NIH continued that while human fetal tissue and embryonic stem cell-derived systems have been used for researching human development and diseases, "new technologies raise the potential of reconstituting these model systems without fetal tissue yielding more replicable and reproducible system for broader uses. (breitbart.com)
  • To do this, they had to produce an army of never-tiring taste testers - that is, flavor receptors engineered from human embryonic kidney cells (HEK-293, a fetal kidney cell line popular in pharmaceutical research). (hli.org)
  • Especially involved are human embryonic stem cells, made using days-old embryos, usually taken from fertility clinics. (rafail.org)
  • Last year, states considered more than 170 bills on embryonic and adult stem cell research. (consciencelaws.org)
  • Should embryonic stem cell research be legal? (consciencelaws.org)
  • Paul Tuns: Kerry Lavender, an assistant professor of biochemistry, microbiology, and immunology at the University of Saskatchewan's College of Medicine, wrote two articles based on government-funded research she has conducted on "humanized mice" experiments that used fetal tissue procured from aborted preborn babies. (theinterim.com)
  • The laboratory, which is supported by the National Institutes of Health, can supply tissue from normal or abnormal embryos and fetuses of desired gestational ages between 40 days and term. (blessedquietness.com)
  • However, regardless of how strongly you support life, you may unknowingly be cooperating in aborted fetal cell research by purchasing products that use aborted fetuses either in the product itself or in its development. (hli.org)
  • The Human Capital series includes footage of fetuses from a separate source (The Center for Bioethical Reform ) and an interview with a former employee of StemExpress , a company that procures human tissue for researchers. (vox.com)
  • OHRP is in charge of overseeing any research done on human fetuses. (lifenews.com)
  • Catholic leaders and others who oppose abortions have raised concerns that potential COVID-19 vaccines are being developed using cells derived from aborted fetuses. (newsweek.com)
  • They might argue that even though human embryos and fetuses are human beings, they are not developed enough to be morally significant. (abort73.com)
  • NCER Comments: NCER condemns the use of human fetal tissue from abortions in medical research as unethical for the following reasons: 1) Human embryos and fetuses are human beings in their earliest stages of development. (ethicalresearch.net)
  • The same consent process applies to fetuses to prevent doctors from coercing women to have an abortion . (asu.edu)
  • The law itself doesn't make a lot of sense: it is OK to sell fetal tissue, as long as you don't get a very good price. (powerlineblog.com)
  • Your children might enjoy using coffee creamers and eat soup with artificial flavor enhancers (Senomyx and Firmenich) tested on artificial taste buds engineered from aborted fetal cells. (hli.org)
  • The merge does not seem to have stopped the use of aborted fetal cells in development. (hli.org)
  • Research conducted using fetal tissue remains from abortion is unethical. (californiafamily.org)
  • On November 8, SFLA Fellow Lucia Hunt organized a conference gathering experts and advocates to discuss the unethical research being conducted at the University of Pittsburgh and funded by the federal government under Anthony Fauci. (studentsforlife.org)
  • Research using fetal tissue from aborted babies is unethical and should not continue under his leadership," said Greg Schleppenbach, associate director of the U.S. bishops' Secretariat of Pro-Life Activities, in a Dec. 18 statement. (trentonmonitor.com)
  • Development of an effective, safe and widely available vaccine for the novel coronavirus is deeply important, but its development should avoid unethical links to abortion, said pro-life leaders in a letter to the Trump administration. (catholicnewsagency.com)
  • Researchers currently explore prospects of using 3D printing or stem cells to produce organs, but some such research projects have been crictised for their use of human embryos taken through abortions, as in controversies about Planned Parenthood's selling of fetal organs and tissues for research. (wikipedia.org)
  • The 1968 UAGA set a legislative precedent for the donation of fetal organs and tissues and has been in the background of many debates regarding abortion and fetal tissue research. (asu.edu)
  • Dr. Tara Sander Lee of the Charlotte Lozier Institute testified that human fetal tissue was never needed for research because of viable alternatives such as adult stem cells. (breitbart.com)
  • David Prentice, vice president and research director at the anti-abortion Charlotte Lozier Institute, and associate scholar Dr. James Sherley wrote in a piece on the organization's website that regardless of their individual views, policymakers, healthcare officials, scientists, vaccine creators and funders should consider that the potential ethical dilemma may be a barrier for accessing the vaccine for some. (newsweek.com)
  • The Obama-appointed director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) says that human fetal tissue from elective abortions "will continue to be the mainstay" for federal research. (breitbart.com)
  • Prior to Collins' comments, some pro-life members of Congress were encouraged last week when NIH announced it would spend up to $20 million on alternatives to the use of fetal tissue from elective abortions for research. (breitbart.com)
  • Hospitals exist to heal and preserve life, and yet Magee-Women's Hospital has utterly betrayed that mandate of Hippocratic medicine by actively participating in the intentional and violent destruction of innocent human life by carrying out elective abortions. (studentsforlife.org)
  • Protecting the Unborn: Part I: Examine and make recommendations on the use of fetal tissue provided for research purposes and how related laws governing abortion procedures are interpreted and enforced. (tx.us)
  • Products related to fetal material can be broken down into three categories: artificial flavors, cosmetics, and medicines/vaccines. (hli.org)
  • The Vaccine Chart of the Sound Choice Pharmaceutical Institute (SCPI) lists dozens of vaccines and medical products that contain aborted fetal cell lines. (hli.org)
  • Decades-old fetal cell lines are already used to make a number of common vaccines, including against chickenpox, shingles, Hepatitis A and Rubella. (newsweek.com)
  • The signatories described the use of fetal cell lines as "ethically problematic," and asked Hahn "not only ensure that Americans will have access to a COVID vaccine that is free of ethical concerns, but to encourage and incentivize pharmaceutical companies to use only ethical cell lines or processes for producing vaccines. (newsweek.com)
  • A separate letter to Canadian President Justin Trudeau from Catholic and anti-abortion organizations in that country echoed sentiments from their U.S. counterparts, and asked that he fund vaccines "that do not create an ethical dilemma for many Canadians. (newsweek.com)
  • The Vatican's Academy for Life issued a document in 2017 with regard to vaccines using fetal cell lines from the 1960s to make rubella, chickenpox, polio and hepatitis A vaccines. (newsweek.com)
  • It stated that: "All clinically recommended vaccinations can be used with a clear conscience and that the use of such vaccines does not signify some sort of cooperation with voluntary abortion. (newsweek.com)
  • Fetal tissue was used to develop vaccines, including vaccines against rabies and rubella, or German measles. (rafail.org)
  • Fortunately, there is no need to use ethically problematic cell lines to produce a COVID vaccine, or any vaccine, as other cell lines or processes that do not involve cells from abortions are available and are regularly being used to produce other vaccines," it continued. (catholicnewsagency.com)
  • At the same time, they urged the federal government to "ensure that fundamental moral principles are followed in the development of such vaccines, most importantly, the principle that human life is sacred and should never be exploited. (catholicnewsagency.com)
  • NCER Comments: Several COVID-19 vaccines are currently in development and being tested on a small number of humans. (ethicalresearch.net)
  • His advocacy for using aborted baby parts in research is more reflective of the previous administration rather than the Trump administration, which has consistently advanced the sanctity of human life. (breitbart.com)
  • Kristan Hawkins, president of Students for Life of America called upon the Trump administration to replace Collins in light of his "continued support of inhumane fetal tissue research. (breitbart.com)
  • Wasting no time in response, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, along with 15 other Attorneys General, sent a letter on Thursday to President Trump and the Department of Health and Human Services, urging the administration to end the ban on federal funds for research using fetal tissue from abortions. (californiafamily.org)
  • The request came after the Trump administration said it would ban the use of human fetal tissue in scientific and medical research by government scientists, in a decision one stem-cell biologist told Nature would "set back research. (newsweek.com)
  • People against abortion rights oppose both uses, as does the Trump administration. (rafail.org)
  • While Regeneron did not directly use human fetal cells to make the monoclonal antibody treatment given to Trump, it did use cells derived from an abortion in the Netherlands back in 1972 to make the targets for its antibodies - the mimics of the coronavirus' spike protein. (rafail.org)
  • The letter was copied to President Donald Trump, Vice President Mike Pence, and Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex M. Azar, II. (catholicnewsagency.com)
  • This election cycle, Donald Trump is a conservative, which means he's against abortion. (gawker.com)
  • Notoriously hypocritical anti-abortion Congressman Scott DesJarlais, Republican from Tennessee (which is a Super Tuesday state), has endorsed Donald Trump, the Guardian reports . (gawker.com)
  • The donation of fetal tissue is not against the law and is often very cathartic for the women who choose to donate. (nysbpclc.com)
  • And when faced with the decision of organ and tissue donation during the trauma of a loved one's death, a person's religion suddenly becomes very important. (unos.org)
  • As the decision is being made, the question often arises, "What is my religion's stance on organ and tissue donation? (unos.org)
  • Most people are not aware of their religious group's doctrine or position regarding organ and tissue donation. (unos.org)
  • Research into the positions of various religious groups reveals the underlying attitude that unless the group has taken action to prohibit organ or tissue donation and transplantation, it is usually assumed that such donation is permissible. (unos.org)
  • Although this is a passive approach to affirming organ and tissue donation and transplantation, it seems to be the position of a large population of the religious community. (unos.org)
  • All faith leaders are encouraged to research their religious group's tradition and position on organ and tissue donation and transplantation, as well as other biomedical ethical issues. (unos.org)
  • It is important to be informed, since the family members who are suddenly faced with making a decision concerning organ and tissue donation of a loved one may depend on the faith leader to know the position held by their religious group. (unos.org)
  • The following summary of statements concerning various religious groups' positions on organ and tissue donation and transplantation may be of help to you. (unos.org)
  • Organ and tissue donation is viewed as an act of neighborly love and charity by these denominations. (unos.org)
  • The Act sets a regulatory framework for the donation of organs, tissues, and other human body parts in the US. (asu.edu)
  • The NCCUSL drafted the Act in August of 1967 in an attempt to unify the US states on the topic of organ and tissue donation. (asu.edu)
  • There has also been controversy over the donation of embryos, which the 2006 Act addresses by stating that it neither allows or disallows the use of donated embryos for research, and that other federal laws address this topic. (asu.edu)
  • In October 2015, House Republicans voted to create a special committee to investigate abortion service providers and fetal tissue donation. (mediamatters.org)
  • According to a pre-hearing piece published by Politico , panel Republicans intended to present a report of "accounting, marketing, and other business documents that they say indicate" that providers and procurement companies profited from fetal tissue donation. (mediamatters.org)
  • We do not need fetal body parts from aborted babies to achieve future scientific and medical advancements," Lee said in her prepared testimony. (breitbart.com)
  • In a 2012 letter to Children of God for Life, PepsiCo stated that "Senomyx does not use HEK cells or any other tissues or cell lines derived from human embryos or babies for research performed on behalf of PepsiCo. (hli.org)
  • The federal government spent $19 million on research involving the body parts of aborted babies in 1999 at the end of the Clinton administration. (lifenews.com)
  • This is true of the reasons chosen for abortion, such as sex-selective abortion, or the fact that we have abortion for disabled babies up to birth in the United Kingdom. (premierchristianity.com)
  • It is equally true of the grisly practicalities of it, as with the gradual dismemberment of babies in second and third trimester abortions through use of powerful suction or surgical instruments. (premierchristianity.com)
  • Why, from their point of view, if you had access to the bodies of thousands of aborted babies whom you are contracted to kill, would you not take the opportunity to recycle these remains to some benefit? (premierchristianity.com)
  • In Enhancing Evolution, leading bioethicist John Harris dismantles objections to genetic engineering, stem-cell research, designer babies, and cloning and makes an ethical case for biotechnology that is both forthright and rigorous. (philpapers.org)
  • Regardless of how the Supreme Court rules in June 2022, states are continuing at record pace to advance and enact commonsense laws that protect and support moms and their babies, especially in the face of the most pro-abortion administration our nation has ever faced. (dailysignal.com)
  • The notice cited an undercover video shot by anti-abortion activists as the foundation for cutting off all of the provider's Texas affiliates from Medicaid funding. (dallasnews.com)
  • It's why scientists fight so hard to keep access to this research, despite the efforts of anti-abortion activists. (rafail.org)
  • Asked by reporters what would happen if HHS determines contracts with fetal procurement companies did not meet those regulations, Collins said: "I guess we'll have to cross that bridge when we get to it. (breitbart.com)
  • Second Hearing Poised To Focus On "Accounting, Marketing, And Other Business Documents" To Allege Wrongdoing By Abortion Providers And Procurement Companies. (mediamatters.org)
  • The practice of coercion could be considered exploitative of the poor population, violating basic human rights according to Articles 3 and 4 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. (wikipedia.org)
  • In practice, organ and tissue banks often choose patients in ways that secure their revenue, whereas "altruistic" clinics may not have the income necessary to fund their own needs, let alone to support research and development to improve quality and availability of care People with intellectual disabilities have historically been excluded from organ transplantation waitlists. (wikipedia.org)
  • The transformation process contains different phases, and in the interview material we observed that the foetal material or cells were considered objects, subjects or rejected as abject by the researchers handling them, depending on what phase of process or practice they referred to or had experience of. (lu.se)
  • As demonstrated in the analysis, it is the human origin of the cell that makes it abjective and activates pollution discourse, when the researchers talk of their practice. (lu.se)
  • this story simply illustrates the inhumanity at the core of abortion practice itself. (premierchristianity.com)
  • It is [odd] to claim that federal judges, who have no experience in the regulations and ethics applicable to Medicaid or medical practice, much less in regard to harvesting fetal organs for research, should claim superior expertise. (texastribune.org)
  • The Society, along with ACOG and SMFM, wrote signed on to a letter to the Colorado Medical Board urging them to follow the science and protect pregnant people by acknowledging "abortion reversal" is not accepted standard medical practice. (societyfp.org)
  • Depending on whom you talk to, this is either a gross intimidation tactic by the state or a necessary practice to verify that clinics are complying with a previously enacted state law that bans abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy. (gawker.com)
  • Abortion practice in Britain and the United States / Colin Francome. (who.int)
  • Now, President Barack Obama has expanded that figure and the Obama administration currently spends $77 million in taxpayer funds to promote such research with aborted baby body parts via NIH, the National Institutes of Health. (lifenews.com)
  • The battle over abortion rights continues in North Carolina, where state law now requires doctors to send the ultrasounds of women seeking abortions to state officials. (gawker.com)
  • Technical problems have hampered attempts to isolate individual fetal cells and, even when such cells could be found, there was no guarantee that they were from the present pregnancy. (nature.com)
  • The legislation, called the "heartbeat bill," would have prohibited abortions at the first detectable heartbeat, or as early as six weeks of pregnancy. (trentonmonitor.com)
  • The Supreme Court may have struck down abortion regulations that would have shut down all but five clinics providing termination of pregnancy services in Texas, but there's always going to be new abortion regulations in Texas. (gawker.com)
  • More than 40% of all women will end a pregnancy by abortion at some time in their reproductive lives. (medscape.com)
  • Pregnancy changes the human body dramatically. (technologynetworks.com)
  • One of the smallest alterations that pregnancy produces may also be the most important, suggests new research exploring cell populations passed between mother and child. (technologynetworks.com)
  • When male and female mice reproduced, says Way, if the male mouse's immune signature matched that of their partner's microchimeric cells, pregnancy complications like spontaneous abortion or stillbirth were greatly reduced, suggesting that matching microchimeras act to provide immune protection to a growing fetus. (technologynetworks.com)
  • Some are also transmitted through contaminated blood products, tissue transfer and from mother to child during pregnancy, childbirth and breastfeeding. (who.int)
  • If neural tube defects occurred in a woman's previous pregnancy, increased antepartum fetal surveillance is required for the current pregnancy. (medscape.com)
  • According to the TERIS, the teratogenic risk in human pregnancy is undetermined for 91.2% of the drug treatments approved in the United States between 1980 and 2000. (medscape.com)
  • Worldwide, some 20-30 million legal abortions are performed annually, with another 10-20 million abortions performed illegally (see The Alan Guttmacher Institute ). (medscape.com)
  • Should the state fund adult stem cell research instead? (consciencelaws.org)
  • Great Iranian Muslim scholars netics, stem cell research, and organ trans- laid huge emphasis on teaching and practis- plantation are some of the medical issues ing ethics. (who.int)
  • The U.S. Supreme Court announced last month that it will take up, in its 2021-2022 term, the major Mississippi abortion case Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization , which will test the fate of pre-viability abortions. (dailysignal.com)
  • For decades, states have put guardrails in place to protect women and children in their state from the exploitive abortion industry, and 2021 is turning out to be a banner year for pro-life protections. (dailysignal.com)
  • Trump's base, of course, is strongly against abortion rights and his administration acted quickly to reverse many Obama era policies - including policies that moved forward scientific research involving human fetal tissue. (rafail.org)
  • Donald Trump's bold and short-lived pronouncement that women who get abortions should be punished failed to translate for a coalition of anti-abortion groups that, looking to him as a sort of father figure, faced the harsh realization that he had no interest in raising them. (gawker.com)
  • Donald Trump's abortion policy, like his hair, is a confusing mess of ever-changing threads, all of which are at odds with one another. (gawker.com)
  • Science reports that NIH director Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D . noted Thursday that while research on alternatives to the use of aborted fetal tissue is "scientifically, highly justified," fetal tissue will nevertheless "continue to be the mainstay. (breitbart.com)
  • He described alternative forms of research as "scientifically, highly justified" but he also said fetal tissue "will continue to be the mainstay" for research and can be done with an "ethical framework. (trentonmonitor.com)
  • Ask yourself what you can do to help the right-to-life movement in its campaign to re-humanise society's view of the unborn child, and secure respect for the dignity of every human being. (premierchristianity.com)
  • You've said the Hippocratic Oath to do no harm, and now Bill Lockyer is forcing you to participate in killing an unborn child in a bloody abortion procedure. (consciencelaws.org)
  • During his confirmation hearings, Xavier Becerra dodged questions about his stance on partial-birth abortion - when an unborn child is partially delivered and then killed - deflecting with repeated claims that he would 'follow the law' as head of HHS," Dannenfelser said. (ncregister.com)
  • Opening Lines provides two kinds of promotional literature, brochures for abortion clinics and brochures for researchers and industry, which Life Dynamics includes in its booklet of documentation. (blessedquietness.com)
  • A federal appeals court has ruled that Wisconsin's law requiring that abortion providers have admitting privileges at a local hospital-effectively and deliberately shutting down clinics in the state-is unconstitutional, reports the Associated Press. (gawker.com)
  • DUBLIN - Although Ireland's new abortion law takes effect Jan. 1, by mid-December, only 8 percent of family doctors had signed up to provide the terminations. (trentonmonitor.com)
  • After ruling last month that Northern Ireland's abortion law "breaches human rights," a Belfast judge declined today to actually change it. (gawker.com)
  • The NIH director's statements drew strong reactions from pro-life leaders, including Family Research Council president Tony Perkins, who said Collins' views are more reflective of the Obama administration. (breitbart.com)
  • Physicians and activists collaborate on a letter to major social media platforms demanding they take immediate action to address widespread disinformation about abortion. (societyfp.org)
  • Since the widespread legalization of abortion, abortionists, protected and promoted by media publicists, have dramatized the plight of the poor pregnant girl whose life can only be set right by free and easy access to tax-funded abortions. (blessedquietness.com)
  • Now the top health official in America, Becerra outright denies the existence of a law banning partial-birth abortion since 2003," Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of the pro-life Susan B. Anthony List, stated on Wednesday. (ncregister.com)
  • Was improving and safeguarding human life the primary concern of those Wuhan lab researchers, or were they - like the NIAID-funded University of Pittsburgh researchers - operating on the conviction that sacrificing human lives may be an acceptable cost for achieving some other goal? (studentsforlife.org)
  • The brave new world of widespread prenatal genetic diagnosis has been always 'arriving' since Nature published a paper by Danish researchers Fritz Fuchs and Povl Riis in 1956, reporting the first prenatal genetic testing in humans 4 . (nature.com)
  • Two of the leading researchers in cell-free fetal DNA testing - Dennis Lo of the University of Hong Kong and Steve Quake of Stanford University in California - use different methods to analyse fetal cell-free DNA from maternal serum. (nature.com)
  • Results: The findings indicate that the labour performed by the researchers in the trial work involves transforming the foetal material practically, as well as culturally, from trash to treasure. (lu.se)
  • Focusing on how practical as well as emotional and cultural strategies and rationalizations of the researchers emerge in interview accounts, this study adds insights on the rationale of practically procuring, transforming and utilizing the foetal material to the already existing studies focused on the donations. (lu.se)
  • Instead, researchers have to look at individual tissues to track them down. (technologynetworks.com)
  • Terrifying news out of Oklahoma: state legislators there passed a bill today that would make performing an abortion a felony punishable by up to three years in prison. (gawker.com)
  • By 1869, the Catholic Church declared abortion a sin punishable by excommunication. (medscape.com)
  • Here, courtesy of the National Institutes of Health, in taxpayer-funded black and white, is the reality of America's culture of death: commercial cannibalism of the young of the human species, a business about to break into the mainstream as a coalition of major medical and health organizations, businesses, and associations press for federal funding of lethal embryo research. (blessedquietness.com)
  • consortium agreement A formalized agreement whereby a research project is carried out by the recipient and one or more other organizations that are separate legal entities. (nih.gov)
  • This section would not have been possible without the tremendous work done by other human rights organizations tracking the current onslaught of state legislation. (irehr.org)
  • It is this prospect that prompted chairmen of four U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops committees, as well as leaders of other anti-abortion organizations in the U.S., to write the U.S. Food and Drug Administration commissioner Stephen Hahn in April. (newsweek.com)
  • The Society signed on to an amicus brief filed by ACOG in the case of Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v FDA uplifting the safety and efficacy of mifepristone and challenging a group of organizations suing the FDA in an effort to dramatically limit access to medication abortion. (societyfp.org)
  • Nearly 50 of the nation's leading medical and scientific associations, research institutions, and advocacy organizations urge the FDA to add miscarriage to the label for mifepristone. (societyfp.org)
  • Adolescent health organizations share a statement condemning the Supreme Court decision in Dobbs v Jackson Women's Health Organization as a violation of human rights and detrimental to adolescents and young adults. (societyfp.org)
  • Others, including Philadelphia's Archbishop Charles Chaput, have already noted that in the 1980s, abortion advocates attempted to silence various pro-life groups using RICO, the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. (firstthings.com)
  • References to non-CDC sites on the Internet are provided as a service to MMWR readers and do not constitute or imply endorsement of these organizations or their programs by CDC or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (cdc.gov)
  • IMPLICATIONS: Our findings suggest multiple strategies for improving the state of expert involvement in abortion policymaking, including expanding the pool of testifiers to include nonabortion providers and experts with a range of backgrounds, as well as supporting organizations that link experts to training and advocacy networks. (bvsalud.org)
  • The US Department of Health and Human Services has stopped the National Institutes of Health from obtaining any more fetal tissue for research and has set up a board that has virtually stopped it from funding any academic groups that use it. (rafail.org)
  • WASHINGTON - An official at the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops said recent comments made by Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, in defending human fetal tissue research were "deeply disturbing. (trentonmonitor.com)
  • The magazine said that during the meeting at the National Institutes of Health offices outside Washington in Bethesda, Maryland, Collins said the Department of Health and Human Services is auditing federal purchases of fetal tissue and that the National Institutes of Health has agreed to spend up to $20 million on research on alternatives. (trentonmonitor.com)
  • The NIH director said the recent decision of its parent agency - the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) - to audit federal purchases of aborted fetal tissue is being done simply "to assure the skeptics about the value of fetal tissue research [and] that this is being done according to all the appropriate regulations, guidelines, and oversight. (breitbart.com)
  • Last Wednesday, the Department of Health and Human Services restricted the use of federal funds for research using fetal tissue from abortions. (californiafamily.org)
  • Hawkins concluded her Washington Examiner op-ed by noting, "Americans would be justified in asking whether the federal public health apparatus is acting in the interest of preserving American lives - or human life at all - when it is an active, knowing, and willing participant in killing, organ harvesting, and experimenting on the most defenseless American children. (studentsforlife.org)
  • In addition, the Obama administration has expanded federal funding for such research. (lifenews.com)
  • The federal government cannot stop private industry from using fetal tissue and Regeneron supports its use. (rafail.org)
  • Instead of behaving like a lawyer for the wealthy abortion groups, Lockyer should immediately draft legislation to conform California to the new federal law. (consciencelaws.org)
  • Under federal law , 42 U.S.C. Sec. 289g-2, it is legal to give or transfer fetal tissue, but not for "valuable consideration. (powerlineblog.com)
  • WASHINGTON - The Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) on Wednesday would not acknowledge an existing federal ban on "partial-birth abortion. (ncregister.com)
  • The law amended the federal criminal code to outlaw partial-birth abortion, defining it as a procedure where a baby is partially delivered until either the baby's head or trunk is outside the mother's body, and the doctor acts to kill the baby. (ncregister.com)
  • Since the landmark 1973 US Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion, hundreds of laws, federal and state, have been proposed or passed, making this the most actively litigated and highly publicized area in the field of medicine. (medscape.com)
  • Biologists have known for decades that some fetal cells pass through the placenta and into the mother's blood stream. (nature.com)
  • GOF research had been quietly pursued internationally for decades before it was officially named and given public attention. (ethicalresearch.net)
  • In recent decades, great strides have been made in biomedi- cal ethics, especially in the fields of education, research and legislation. (who.int)
  • But co-founder Josh Morrison hopes to show that there is broad support for human-challenge trials, which have the potential to deliver an effective coronavirus vaccine more quickly than standard trials. (nature.com)
  • Regeneron made its monoclonal antibodies by genetically engineering mice so they would produce human antibodies, and injecting them with the coronavirus spike protein. (rafail.org)
  • A new bill outlawing abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected was signed 10 days earlier by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott. (dailysignal.com)
  • The Center for Medical Progress video campaign is a dishonest attempt to make legal, voluntary and potentially lifesaving tissue donations appear nefarious and illegal. (powerlineblog.com)
  • During a hearing of the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on health, Rep. Gus Bilirakis, R-Fla., asked HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra if he agreed that partial-birth abortion is illegal. (ncregister.com)
  • Illegal abortions are unsafe and account for 13% of all maternal mortality and serious complications. (medscape.com)
  • The Pro-Life Generation demands an END to the barbaric human rights abuses being committed on born and preborn human children with the cooperation of the University of Pittsburgh and UPMC Magee-Women's Hospital. (studentsforlife.org)
  • I chose to conduct this conference at the University of Pittsburgh because it is at the forefront of aborted fetal research," said Lucia Hunt. (studentsforlife.org)
  • The nationally recognized Health Sciences Tissue Bank is embedded within the Department of Pathology at the University of Pittsburgh Health Systems, providing 'rapid access to very quality tissue and biological specimen' (according to their NIH grant application ). (studentsforlife.org)
  • Andrea Gambotto, who is leading the research at the University of Pittsburgh, told Science why these human cells are useful. (newsweek.com)
  • Human listeriosis was very rare in England and Wales during the 1960s and 1970s but increased at the end of the 1980s. (cdc.gov)
  • Consultative and Diagnostic Pathology, Inc., will be asking to obtain tissue specimens from your patient's medical procedure. (blessedquietness.com)
  • In order to achieve this important goal, we need to make sure that scientists and medical professionals have access to the research and resources necessary to protect the population and safeguard the most vulnerable among us, including pregnant women and children. (californiafamily.org)
  • Fetal tissue HAS NOT produced a single medical treatment. (californiafamily.org)
  • It is seen by many in the medical and research field as an invaluable part of research for prevention of several diseases. (nysbpclc.com)
  • Historically the lure of significant amounts of money has often created pressures upon individual exercise of rights of conscience, and the potential profits, research funds and medical revenue dollars access to which may be impeded to some extent exercise of rights of conscience are substantial. (consciencelaws.org)
  • These are in development by companies like Sanofi, Pasteur, and Inovio, they added, while also noting the work of the Iowa-based John Paul II Medical Research Institute. (catholicnewsagency.com)
  • Improving Access to Care through TeleHealth: Study and make recommendations on the appropriate use, scope and application of tele-monitoring and telemedicine services to improve management and outcomes for adults and children with complex medical needs and for persons confined in correctional facilities. (tx.us)
  • Section 3 provides a list of qualified donees, the recipients of the gift, including hospitals, medical schools, universities, and storage facilities for the purpose of research and education as well as individuals who will receive the gift for transplantation. (asu.edu)
  • For example, a gift received by a medical school must be used for research or for the improvement of the medical field, while a gift given to an individual must be used for his or her medical treatment or tissue transplant. (asu.edu)
  • Abortion is one of the most common medical procedures performed in the United States each year. (medscape.com)
  • Use of trade names and commercial sources is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by the National Association of State Public Health Veterinarians, Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists, Association of Avian Veterinarians, American Veterinary Medical Association, or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (cdc.gov)
  • My research career has been unadventurous in the sense that I have remained at the same institution, Lund University in Sweden, where I started my medical studies in 1964. (lu.se)
  • I was then 24 years old and had to decide whether I wanted to complete my medical training or stay in research. (lu.se)
  • Analysing the free-floating fragments of fetal DNA that exist in a pregnant woman's blood serum is proving more successful. (nature.com)
  • When this is joined to the "fact" that the thing inside the woman's body is nothing more than a mass of cells (a "fact" established by opposing sensible-but morally awkward-ultrasound requirements), abortion suddenly becomes a viable alternative. (firstthings.com)
  • These in utero infections have been associated with the potential for devastating outcomes including microcephaly and spontaneous abortions. (cdc.gov)
  • Irish President Michael D. Higgins signed the legislation into law Dec. 20, paving the way for wide-ranging access to abortion in the country. (trentonmonitor.com)
  • Monitor the implementation of legislation addressed by the Senate Committee on Health and Human Services during the 84th Regular Session related to the revocation of nursing home licenses for repeated serious violations. (tx.us)
  • Melissa Farrell, the employee captured on the tape, testified that she was only discussing modifying how the clinic handles tissue after an abortion, not changing the procedure. (dallasnews.com)
  • He recommended calling the procedure "dilation-and-extraction," and defended its use to "protect" the health of mothers as a late-term abortion procedure. (ncregister.com)
  • And as my wife would tell you as a OB-GYN, is that the dilation-and-extraction procedure that is often used with late-stage abortions with women, it's to protect the health and life of that woman," he said. (ncregister.com)
  • Which Cosmetics Use Fetal Cells? (hli.org)
  • Background: Rich in different kind of potent cells, embryos are used in modern regenerative medicine and research. (lu.se)
  • Methods: This article examines different emotional, cognitive and discursive strategies used by neurobiologists in a foetal cell transplantation trial in Parkinson's disease research, using cells harvested from aborted embryos. (lu.se)
  • Conclusions: The marginal and ambiguous status of the embryo that emerges in the accounts turns the scientists handling foetal cells into liminal characters in modern medicine. (lu.se)
  • To make sure their antibodies were working right, Regeneron needed to use laboratory facsimiles of this spike protein, and for that, they used the fetal cells. (rafail.org)
  • Research using such stem cells allows Regeneron to model complex diseases, test new drug candidates and can help unlock new scientific insights that ultimately could lead to the discovery of new treatments for people with serious diseases," the company said in a statement posted last April. (rafail.org)
  • The hearing focused on the possibility of using different types of "humanized" mice - with human cells and immune systems - in biomedical research. (trentonmonitor.com)
  • 1 In just six weeks time, the human embryo goes from looking like a "bunch of cells" to looking like a baby - though only a half inch tall! (abort73.com)
  • His team's research focuses on these "microchimeric" cells. (technologynetworks.com)
  • The moratorium on human embryo research coincided with the Republican presidencies of Ronald Reagan and George Bush. (the-scientist.com)
  • Leaving newborns to die is horrible, but letting scientists pick through their bodies for parts is an even larger affront to human dignity. (californiafamily.org)
  • NIH) says that animal research allows scientists to "identify new ways to treat illnesses, extend life, and improve health and well-being. (studentsforlife.org)
  • Non-invasive prenatal genetic diagnosis is already in clinical use for fetal blood-type screening. (nature.com)
  • An accurate understanding of prenatal development makes it impossible to argue that abortion is the mere removal of undifferentiated cell tissue or that the developing embryo is simply a part of the mother's body. (abort73.com)
  • 2) Every human being has a right to life and abortion constitutes the deliberate destruction of a prenatal human being. (ethicalresearch.net)
  • In our 2022 year-end report, we briefly discussed an ethical issue directly associated with the recent pandemic, namely Gain of Function (GOF) research. (ethicalresearch.net)
  • Figure 5.3 also shows the number of such bills by type, illustrating that COVID bills, Voter Restriction efforts, and Anti-Abortion politics lay at the forefront of far-right legislative mobilizations nationally. (irehr.org)
  • For example, in a September 19 letter to NIH director Harold Varmus, Rep. Robert Dornan (R-Calif.) and about 30 other members of Congress argued that such research should not be funded by the agency. (the-scientist.com)
  • Specifically, according to HHS's own documents, 'Section 498A of the Public Health Service Act [42 USC 289g-1] requires the annual submission to Congress of a report describing research involving therapeutic transplantation of human fetal tissue supported or conducted by the NIH. (lifenews.com)
  • Ultimately, the only documents turned over were the redacted emails and several letters from HHS to Congress stating that the National Institute of Health (another part of HHS) had no required reports to give Congress about research on transplanting human fetal tissue for therapeutic purposes because NIH hadn't been involved with any such work. (lifenews.com)
  • In 2003, Congress passed the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, signed into law by President George W. Bush. (ncregister.com)
  • On April 20, Congress' Select Investigative Panel on Infant Lives held its second hearing: "The Pricing of Fetal Tissue. (mediamatters.org)
  • The fetal skin cell line that PSPs are based on was taken from an electively aborted baby whose body was donated to the University. (hli.org)
  • John Hostetler, a world-renowned authority on the Amish religion, wrote in his book, Amish Society, "The Amish believe that since God created the human body, it is God who heals. (unos.org)
  • The point is to use the mice as efficient factories to grow antibodies that the human body will recognize and not reject. (rafail.org)
  • The Act has been consulted in discussions about abortion , fetal tissue transplants, and Body Worlds , an anatomy exhibition. (asu.edu)
  • The decedent is the individual whose organs, tissues, or body are donated. (asu.edu)
  • The BPCLC is comprised of 86 legislators in both the New York State Senate and Assembly, dedicated to protecting access to quality reproductive health services, safeguarding legal rights to reproductive healthcare in New York State, and providing a voice for state legislators in policy debates at both the state and national level. (nysbpclc.com)
  • Becerra, a Catholic, added that he was not primarily questioning the use of the term "partial-birth abortion," but was rather emphasizing "what the rights are to the woman under our statutes and under our precedents to provide her with reproductive care that she is entitled to. (ncregister.com)
  • Senator Tammy Duckworth submits a resolution opposing the criminalization of the full range of reproductive and sexual healthcare, including abortion, gender-affirming care, and contraceptive care. (societyfp.org)
  • Congresswoman Nikema Williams submits a resolution opposing the criminalization of the full range of sexual and reproductive health care such as abortion, gender-affirming care, and contraceptive care. (societyfp.org)
  • Reproductive Endocrinology Research Unit, Karolinska sjukhuset, [1972? (who.int)
  • Reproductive Endocrinology Research Unit, Karolinska sjukhuset, [1971? (who.int)
  • This study examines the barriers experts in reproductive health experience to testifying at state legislative committee hearings regarding abortion. (bvsalud.org)
  • CONCLUSIONS: These barriers appear unique to testifying on abortion and represent a complex web of hurdles that experts in reproductive health must navigate to participate in this part of the policymaking process. (bvsalud.org)
  • Caplan also said: "There are better ways to win the abortion wars than telling people not to use a vaccine. (newsweek.com)
  • It is critically important that Americans have access to a vaccine that is produced ethically: no American should be forced to choose between being vaccinated against this potentially deadly virus and violating his or her conscience," said the April 17 letter to Dr. Stephen M. Hahn, commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. (catholicnewsagency.com)
  • They cited the case of Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc, which has a "substantial contract" from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and is working on a vaccine produced using "ethically problematic cell lines. (catholicnewsagency.com)
  • And my luck was that I entered brain research at the time, in the late 1960s, when modern neuroscience was born, and in the labora- tory where a new groundbreaking microscopic technique, the Falck-Hillarp monoamine histofluorescence method, had just been developed. (lu.se)
  • Perchlorate, a widespread environmental contaminant originating from various industrial applications, agricultural practices, and natural sources, poses potential risks to ecosystems and human health. (bvsalud.org)