A scandal surrounding the fabrications and ethical grey-area practices
of disgraced cloning researcher Hwang Woo-suk has stoked international
efforts to come up with more comprehensive ethical guidelines for stem
cell research. The International Society for Stem Cell Research (ISSCR) will hold
a first meeting of a task force consisting of 20 experts from a dozen
countries including the U.S., the U.K. and Japan on Jan. 24. The ISSCR
is a leading international body with more than 4,000 members. It formed
the task force in November, when Hwang first admitted to ethical lapses
in occyte procurement for research. ISSCR vice president George Daley, a professor at the Harvard
Medical School, leads the task force, which includes science, law and
ethics specialists. Ian Wilmut, who cloned the sheep Dolly, and Norio
Nakatsuji of Kyoto University will join the task force as science
specialists. From Korea, Junn Sung-chull, the chairman of the Institute
of Global Management and an international lawyer, will participate as a
legal advisor. The task force will formulate rules for supervisory
boards in research institutes and ethical guidelines for ova donation,
Junn said. Prof. Kim Dong-wook of the Department of physiology at Yonsei
University College of Medicine, who represents Korea in the ISSCR, said
the scandal created a general consensus among scientists that
bioengineering must stand on firm ethical grounds, which is why the
guidelines will have great symbolic meaning. ([email protected] )
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