The US federal government may resume funding of embryonic stem cell research for now, an appeals court said on Thursday, but the short-term approval may be of little help to research scientists caught in a legal battle that has just begun.
It is far from certain that scientists actually will continue to get federal money as they struggle to decide what to do with research that is hard to start and stop.
After US District Court Judge Royce Lamberth issued a preliminary order barring the funding on Aug. 23, the National Institutes of Health suspended work on funding new research projects on embryonic stem cells. While the health institutes did not immediately comment on Thursday on the temporary stay from the appeals court, the government’s process for approving these grants is unlikely to resume before a final court resolution.
With appeals, that could be many months off.
“No way this would be a scientific reprieve,” said Patrick Clemins of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Scientists who already have received taxpayer money for stem cell experiments can continue their work until their money run out, but 22 projects that were due to get yearly checks this month were told after Lamberth’s order that they would have to find other money.
Most of the researchers have multiple sources of funding and are working now to separate what they can and cannot continue, Clemins said.
Medical researchers value stem cells because they are master cells that can turn into any tissue of the body. Research eventually could lead to cures for spinal cord injuries, Parkinson’s disease and other ailments, they believe.
US President Barack Obama’s administration is asking the appeals court in Washington to strike down a preliminary injunction by Lamberth that blocked the funding. Lamberth left little doubt that he is inclined to issue a final order barring that funding, but he has yet to issue that ruling, which inevitably will set off a new round of appeals.
Lamberth concluded that those who challenged the government support had demonstrated a strong likelihood of success in their lawsuit. He said the clear intent of a law passed by the US Congress was to prohibit federal spending on research in which a human embryo is destroyed.
Steven Aden, senior legal counsel for the Alliance Defense Fund, which is involved with that lawsuit, said after Thursday’s action: “The American people should not be forced to pay for even one more day of experiments that destroy human life, have produced no real-world treatments and violate an existing federal law.”
Lamberth rejected the Obama administration’s request to let funding continue while it appealed his preliminary order, but the three-member appeals panel disagreed on Thursday. It is suspending Lamberth’s ruling for now.
The appeals judges pointedly cautioned that their three-paragraph order “should not be construed in any way as a ruling on the merits.”
“Nothing has really changed because all issues are still out there and still unresolved,” said Norman Fost, director of the bioethics program at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, who was on the National Academy of Sciences committee that wrote the first national guidelines on embryonic human stem cells.
Samuel Casey, part of the legal team representing those who filed the lawsuit, said: “We expect that when the court of appeals reviews the merits of the case, it will agree with the logic that led Judge Lamberth to issue the preliminary injunction.”
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