Policy Issue #2: Stem Cell Research in PA
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Task
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Context:
The Commonwealth Commission, which has been appointed by the Governor
of Pennsylvania and empowered to suggest innovative development
projects for Pennsylvania, has hired your consulting firm to explore
the possibility of Pennsylvania following the example of California and
funding embryonic stem cell research for in-state researchers. The
Commission wants to know:
(1) What are
the potential benefits from embryonic stem cell research and how likely
are they?
(2) What are
the potential benefits to stem cell research being subsidized in
Pennsylvania, and how do they compare to the public funding
outlays required?
(3) What are
the moral objections to embryonic stem cell research and are there
adequate moral responses to them? Is there a moral case to be made in
favor of this research? What about religious objections and religious
responses?
(4)What are
the implications for science and and science related economic activity
in Pennsylvania with and without public financing and support?
(5)Does the
California experience thus far provide any lessons?
and finally, given all that:
(6) Discuss
possible models for state funding for embryonic stem cell reserarch in
Pennsylvania. Should the Commission recommend state funding for
embryonic stem cell research and if so, under what model? What ethical
safeguards and oversight, if any, should be put in place?
• Background research report: Due
Tuesday, February 28, 2005
• Final report (binder):
Due Thursday, March 10, 2005
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Documents:
Law
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• GPO Access
• CRS
Reports • GAO Reports
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Documents:
Government
memoranda
and reports
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• NBAC
Executive Summary
• Federal
eligibility criteria for stem cell lines
• Stem cell initiative California
• State laws 2003
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Academic
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• Stem
cell research foundation
• National Institutes of
Health Information Center
• Sandel, Michael J. 2004.
"Embryo Ethics - the moral logic of stem-cell research." New England Journal of Medicine
Jul 15, 2004 351:207.
• Prof. Wright PowerPoint
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News
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• Sign up for google
news alert
• CA
initiative passes
• Stem
cell contamination (1)
• Stem cell contamination (2)
• Stem cells can become
motor neurons
• A Struggling Science Experiment
(Washington Post, 2/13/05)
A Struggling Science Experiment
States Closely Watch California's Stem Cell Research Initiative
By Ariana Eunjung Cha
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, February 13, 2005; Page A01
SAN FRANCISCO -- Last fall, a group of pioneering scientists, venture
capitalists and entrepreneurs sold Californians on the ultimate startup,
one with shoot-for-the-moon ambitions. The men and women pitched the
state's residents on a new science that they said might one day lead to
cures for humankind's worst diseases. "Save Lives with Stem Cells!"
campaign posters urged.
Today, however, a little more than three months after state voters
approved a measure allocating $3 billion in public funds for stem cell
and
related research, organizers are struggling with more down-to-earth
concerns.
Members of the citizens' oversight committee, including Gayle Wilson,
center, are sworn in at a December meeting in San Francisco.
The initiative has been tainted by accusations that those who pushed
hardest for the money stand to benefit from it the most. Advocates
question the pell-mell pace organizers have set to get the program up
and
running; they worry that in their haste, program leaders are taking too
many shortcuts, leaving the initiative vulnerable to being taken
advantage
of by private profiteers and unscrupulous scientists.
"I appreciate that people feel a sense of urgency. But it has to be done
right rather than be done fast," said Susan Berke Fogel, co-founder of
the
Pro-Choice Alliance for Responsible Stem Cell Research, a coalition of
scientific and legal groups that have raised concerns about the
initiative.
The stakes surrounding California's initiative have only grown higher in
recent weeks with the discovery that much of the most promising research
probably cannot be conducted with federal funds because President Bush
has
restricted the money to certain lines of stem cells which now appear
contaminated.
California's experiment is being watched closely by other states.
Maryland
this month became the most recent state, joining Connecticut, Florida,
New
Jersey, New York, and Wisconsin, to allocate or consider allocating
their
own money to stem cell research.
Proposition 71's creators thought the best way to tackle stem cell
research was to create a government agency in a very non-government-like
way. The California Institute of Regenerative Medicine would be run
like a
corporate startup, with the state's populace effectively serving as
shareholders. Elected state officials, including Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger (R), appointed a panel of 29 scientists, businessmen and
university administrators to oversee the effort, in hopes of issuing the
first grants in May.
To streamline and speed things along, the state decided to exempt parts
of
the organization from many of the traditional rules that government
entities must follow, including some regulations governing how agencies
spend money.
It didn't take long for controversy to ensue, starting with the man
selected to lead the effort: Robert Klein II, 59, a Silicon Valley real
estate developer and lawyer who wrote much of Proposition 71 and
created a
nonprofit group to campaign for it. One of his sons has juvenile
diabetes
and his mother has late-stage Alzheimer's.
Public-interest groups worried about his investments in the biotech
industry and his ties to various interest groups. Some even called on
him
to resign.
Critics also expressed concern that other members of the oversight group
might have conflicts of interest: More than few own stakes in biotech
firms or other businesses that could stand to benefit from the research
bonanza. They noted that the first batch of jobs for the institute were
not advertised and went to friends or allies of the members and came
with
lucrative annual salaries, many in the $100,000s.
So loud is the opposition that Democratic state Sen. Deborah Ortiz, one
of
the strongest supporters of the proposition, expressed concern with how
things are proceeding and suggested that new legislation might be needed
to guarantee there's no abuse of the funds and that the neediest
benefit.
A spokeswoman for the institute, Fiona Hutton, vehemently disagreed with
the notion that there is anything fundamentally wrong with the program
or
that new legislation is needed. She said the committee has been working
"cautiously and carefully" and that some issues have been resolved.
Klein, for example, has taken a number of steps to minimize any
appearance
of improper relationships, leaving his post at the nonprofit
organization
that led the campaign and divesting himself of millions of dollars in
biomedical stocks he once held. He has said those actions should be
sufficient to resolve concerns over possible conflicts.
"I don't think there has been any rush to judgment on any front thus
far,"
Hutton said. "The board is keeping the challenges that patients have day
in and day out in their minds, but they are taking logical, prudent
steps
as to how they move this forward."
Human embryonic stem cells are one of the great medical hopes of this
century. Extracted from fertilized eggs in their first days, these cells
have an ability to "grow" into many different types of cells that make
up
the human body, be they muscle cells, brain cells or something else.
Even
though no single treatment has resulted from this research, some think
that scientists will one day be able to engineer these cells so they can
be used to cure all kinds of life-threatening diseases, from heart
disease
and diabetes to cancer and HIV/AIDS. The research, however, has been
opposed by some religious groups, women's rights advocates and others
because the eggs are donated by fertility clinics and the embryos are
destroyed during the laboratory work.
Proposition 71, approved by 59 percent of California voters on Nov. 2,
allocates $295 million a year for 10 years for stem cell research and
outlines a streamlined bureaucratic structure for how the program will
operate. In contrast, the federal government spent $25 million on
similar
research last year.
The initiative is being governed by a citizens' oversight committee and
three working groups focused on specific topics. Members of the
oversight
committee must adhere to state rules regarding financial disclosures,
open
meetings, and civil service laws. The working groups, which act in an
advisory capacity, are exempt -- a source of concern to many
public-interest groups.
"If you don't know what people are saying in the meetings, then you have
no way of telling whether their declared interests are playing an undue
role and influence in what they are recommending," said Terry Francke,
general counsel of Californians Aware, which advocates open government.
Of the 29 members of the committee, at least nine serve on boards of
biotech or pharmaceutical companies or have financial holdings,
according
to disclosure forms they filed. Only a handful of these companies
currently conduct stem cell research, but critics contend that the
potential of the science is so large that it is not hard to imagine that
the firms could one day be involved in the work.
The board's vice chairman, Edward Penhoet, is the co-founder of two
prominent biotech firms, Chiron Corp. and Renovis Inc. He has said he
owns
at least $3.36 million in stocks and stock options in biotech firms.
Tina
S. Nova is chief executive of biotech firm Genoptix Inc. And Ted Love is
president, chief executive and director of biotech venture Nuvelo Inc.
He
has more than $1 million in stock in Nuvelo and another $1 million in
Theravance Inc.
Penhoet, Nova and Love have declined to follow Klein's lead in divesting
their holdings. Hutton said the committee considers such steps a
"personal
decision."
The Jan. 31 meeting of a subcommittee of the oversight group, held in a
windowless room at one of the University of California-San Francisco
medical school buildings, illustrates the mammoth challenges members of
the oversight group face. Panel members briefly discussed complex issues
such as how to handle intellectual property rights for discoveries made
with state money and what protections should be put in place for
patients
for participate in research. They talked about conflict of interest
rules
and ways to address minority health disparities.
The longest discussion concerned the appointment of members of the
Scientific and Medical Accountability Standards Working Group. They
agreed
they wanted scientists, economists, lawyers and ethicists.
Joan Samuelson, an advocate for patients with Parkinson's Disease,
suggested they add someone with an expertise in religion to the mix.
"The
public looks to theologians for guidance," Samuelson said.
Many of the others nodded. But it wasn't long before the implications of
the seemingly simple suggestion sunk in.
Were they looking for someone who was a specialist in Catholicism,
Protestantism, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism or what? What about other sects
and subsects? They wondered what kind of statement it would make if they
chose someone with one belief system over another. And what about
separation of church and state?
In the end, everyone agreed it was too complicated. An explicit call for
theologians was left off the list.
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