Posted on 03/08/2007 6:57:36 PM PST by Coleus
A Livingston hospital has launched what is believed to be the country's first formal program devoted to encouraging expectant families to bank both placental and umbilical cord stem cells. Officials at St. Barnabas Medical Center, where the most New Jersey babies are born each year, said yesterday they have established the program with LifebankUSA of Cedar Knolls, a division of Celgene, a Summit biotechnology company.
"We felt the research of the Celgene scientists held such promise that it would be worth it for our patients to know about it," said Richard Miller, who chairs the department of obstetrics and gynecology at St. Barnabas. "It's for those who are willing to make that investment today for the promise of very exciting potential therapies in the future." Stem cells, the building blocks of tissue, blood and the immune system, can renew indefinitely and form specialized types of cells like blood and nerve cells. Those taken from the placenta and umbilical cord are categorized as "adult" stem cells because they are not drawn from embryos. Their more controversial, highly flexible cousins, known as embryonic stem cells, are loathed by some because the process of extracting them destroys the embryo.
The stem cells extracted at St. Barnabas will be stored in cryogenic tanks at Lifebank. The company was the first in the country last May to offer placental stem cell banking. Working with medical center physicians will be a boon to the biotech firm as well, according to Robert Hariri, who founded Lifebank in 1998 and still heads it under the auspices of Celgene. "It's important in these programs to work at an efficiency and volume where the physicians that are involved in this process and selection become true experts," Hariri said.
(Excerpt) Read more at nj.com ...
Hopefully this will soon be supported by medical insurance companies. Take away the profit motive from killing babies and the political support will dry up.
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