Publication | Open Access
The American Public Is Ready to Accept Human-Animal Chimera Research
34
Citations
14
References
2020
Year
EngineeringFertilityBiomedical EthicScience EthicResearch EthicsHuman-animal Chimera ResearchReproductive BiotechnologyAnimal StudyAnimal ModelsHace ResearchBioethicsPublic HealthConservation BiologyJapanese Survey DataAnimal TestingPublic PolicyXenotransplantationHuman EvolutionBiologySwine EmbryosNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyHuman-animal InteractionEthical Review
We report findings from a new survey of US public attitudes toward human-animal chimeric embryo (HACE) research, designed to compare with recently reported Japanese survey data. We find that 59% of the US public can personally accept the process of injecting human induced pluripotent stem cells into genetically modified swine embryos and having human tissues produced in a pig's body transplanted into a human. This is greater acceptance than in Japan, and there is even strong acceptance among those with strong religious affiliations and who self-identify as conservatives. We argue that strong public support for HACE research, as well as the emerging literature suggesting that humanization of research animals is very unlikely, should compel the NIH to lift its current moratorium on HACE research.
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