Support Swells for Vital University Research Using Fetal Tissue and Cells

University researchers and staff critical of proposal to ban use of fetal tissue in key biomedical research

Written byUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison
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Nearly 1,000 scientists and staff at the University of Wisconsin–Madison joined a growing chorus of objections to a state proposal to ban the use of fetal tissue in life-saving biomedical research by signing a letter opposing the legislation.

“The legislation in both the Assembly and Senate criminalizes the use of fetally-derived tissue, cells or cell lines in research that aims to improve the lives of Wisconsin citizens and the lives of people around the world,” says the letter, authored by three UW–Madison scientists.

The scientists, Anita Bhattacharyya of the Waisman Center and Amie Eisfeld and Pete Halfmann, both from the Department of Pathobiological Sciences, shared the letter across campus and it was signed by at least 975 supporters.

Related article: Genetics Center Concerned About First Application to Pursue Genome Editing Research in Human Embryos

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