Stem Cell Research Benefits

Words: 690
Pages: 3

Embryonic stem cells may lead to a scientific breakthrough. Stem cell researchers should be able to use stem cells from aborted babies to cure diseases. More specifically, researchers should be allowed to use aborted babies that are within a certain week of development for stem cell research. Aborted babies are unwanted by the mother and father. Instead of killing the developing embryo and disposing them, we could use them to help other people. Embryonic stem cells are astonishing. They can help people in both the present and the future. They are the future of medicine.
Stem cells can help people. Since stem cells are pluripotent, which means they are able to differentiate into any type of cell, they can be used cure countless number of diseases.
…show more content…
Aborted babies are, sadly, unwanted in the first place. Researchers should be allowed to use the stem cells from aborted babies who were aborted within a certain time period for life saving research. Embryonic stem cells are usually extracted when the baby is still a blastocyst. A blastocyst is a hollow ball of about 150 cells. The cells inside it are embryonic stem cells. This means that embryonic stem cells are not extracted from the embryo, but from the blastocyst that will later form the embryo. Abortion will result in the death of the baby, or blastocyst, and said baby will then be disposed of. Rather then getting rid of the remains, it would be more beneficial to use them in stem cell research as they are already …show more content…
In the future, because they have the potential to cure diseases, they can make deadly diseases seem like the common cold. They could potentially cure babies who are born with disabilities. The research would make possible for them to live a normal life after birth. Embryonic stem cells can also aid in the development of new medicine. "Human pluripotent stem cell research could also dramatically change the way we develop drugs and test them for safety. For example, new medications could be initially tested using human cell lines...This would not replace testing in whole animals or human beings, but it would streamline the process of drug development. Only the drugs that are both safe and appear to have a beneficial effect in the cell line testing would graduate to further testing in laboratory animals and human subjects" (Espejo, 8-9). A drug used on an animal test subject wouldn't always react the same way on a human test subject. Therefore, the use of a