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A barbaric kind of beauty
Daily Mail ^ | 00:36am 7th August 2006 | By ANDREA THOMPSON

Posted on 08/07/2006 6:56:00 AM PDT by .cnI redruM

Clutching her Hermes holiday bag under her arm, Susan Barrington, a 52-year-old housewife from Buckinghamshire, can't help smiling as she leaves the exclusive clinic in London's Wimpole Street.

She has been given the final go-ahead to travel abroad for a cutting edge nonsurgical treatment that promises to make her look ten years younger.

She doesn't care if the treatment is expensive, involves babies and is so controversial that it is not allowed to be performed in this country - among her well-heeled friends, this is the ultimate new elixir of youth.

The attractive brunette has opted for a controversial stem- cell therapy where umbilical cord tissue from new-born babies will be injected into her body.

It may seem distasteful, but thousands of women have already done it and it is organised by a seemingly respectable British clinic then carried out in Rotterdam, Holland, where rules regarding stemcell therapies are not so strict.

Stem-cell therapy has been big business for beauty doctors since medics discovered the strong healing and rejuvenating potential of stem cells for medical conditions such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. But there has also been a furious ethical debate.

In America, President Bush has denounced stem- cell therapy even for medical purposes as 'godless', vetoing any public funding, though controversially Arnold Schwarzenegger, governor of California, one of the few U.S. states to allow stem-cell research, has allocated 80 million dollars to it. Tony Blair met him only last week to support the move.

So what is it about stem cells that has set tongues wagging in the beauty world? They are the building blocks of every human body but are far more plentiful in embryos, which are still growing, human foetuses, or newborn babies, than in adults.

They are immature but powerful cells that, once extracted, can be stimulated in a laboratory to develop into any type of body cell or organ, including bone, muscle and body tissue.

When injected, these powerful cells target the organs that are not functioning at their optimum and encourage them to produce new tissue.

But scientists agree that further research is required to substantiate the claim that injecting stem cells can diminish wrinkles or reverse the signs of ageing.

In Britain, stem-cell research is governed by strict ethical considerations - it is limited to registered institutions using cells from embryos up to 14 days old or aborted foetuses donated to science.

But it has proved difficult to police clinics abroad and it is here that many people go for a range of stem-cell treatments, with a whole industry happy to cater for their needs.

Such unregulated companies have mushroomed across the globe offering 'aesthetic stem-cell therapies' at exorbitant prices to anyone willing to pay. They claim that stem cells have the ability to rejuvenate the body and renew the cells, not just to produce younger, smoother skin, but increased sex drive and energy.

'By definition, what such clinics are doing is highly experimental and risks damaging the reputation of legitimate stem-cell research we are doing to help cure illnesses,' says leading UK stem-cell researcher Colin Blakemore.

'Because so many clinics are based in tourist spots and refuse to be members of the only recognised board to regulate ethical stem-cell research - The International Stem Cell Forum - there is much room for unethical and morally dubious treatment by unqualified doctors. And if anything goes wrong afterwards, it is hushed up to prevent damage to the business.

This week, posing as a 50-year-old, I went in search of the latest anti-ageing remedies that the world's top clinics have to offer.

My investigation threw up a worrying new trade across the globe in unregulated stemcell treatments costing anywhere between £150 and £20,000. Yet hundreds of British women are visiting such clinics desperate for the new elixirs of youth.

Here, The Mail names clinics at the forefront of this disturbing new beauty craze and reveals what really goes on.

Destination: Barbados:

The Institute for Regenerative Medicine

The Treatment: Anti-ageing stem-cell injections made from aborted foetal tissue, £15,000 The past 12 months have seen this popular holiday resort become the stem-cell capital of the developed world, treating hundreds of patients in a year.

The upmarket clinic opened last year in one of the island's most luxurious hotels - Villa Nova - after Ukrainian stem-cell researchers, who have been secretly pioneering stem-cell studies with aborted human foetuses for 20 years, teamed up with U.S. investors backed by the Caribbean tourist industry.

The aim was to attract wealthy British and American stem-cell tourists for treatment, avoiding the strict ethical barriers to such treatment enforced in Europe and America. The clinic is so busy it has a waiting list of more than 1,000 patients for cosmetic treatments and has treated dozens of British women. The promise: The clinic claims that the foetal tissue derived from elective abortions at six to 12 weeks is rich in regenerative stem cells. 'We inject the cells taken from the liver tissue of human foetuses directly into the vein in the back of your hand,' explains the well-spoken English consultant Jenny, who gives telephone consultations to potential patients.

'The results are incredible. You'll feel and look different after a month because these cells help the body to regenerate itself. The effects last for approximately a year before it needs to be "topped up'' '.

Despite criticism from Church leaders and religious groups on the Island, Barnett Suskind, chief executive of IRM, is unapologetic about the treatment he carries out. 'It is the most natural form of healing there is - in ten years, everyone will be doing this,' he says. 'You think better, sleep better, and look better. Your quality of life improves and your libido certainly improves.' The reality: 'The science behind the treatments on offer at IRM is based on the theory that stem cells from aborted foetuses may search out damaged and dead cells in the body and work to repair and replace them,' says Dr Stephen Minger, director of stem cell biology at King's College, London.

'But what this clinic is doing raises serious issues. For a start, it is not regulated by any medical board and there is no documented evidence or controlled clinical trials to back up their claims. More worryingly, there is no proof that the tissue is obtained from truly elective abortions rather than financially induced ones.

'Research shows that they openly import foetuses from poverty-stricken provinces in Ukraine and Russia, preying on the financially desperate to treat vain Western women.'

Destination: Moscow: The Cellulite Clinic.

The treatment: Anti-ageing injections of stem cells from aborted foetuses into thighs, buttocks and stomach -

£10,000 to £15,000 for a course of six.

More than 50 clinics, including this one, have sprung up in Russia's capital over the past three years to meet the demand from wealthy Russians and Westerners alike who flock to the global capital of cosmetic stem-cell therapy, where clinics use loopholes in the law to administer injections.

Nearby Ukraine is home to Emcell, the world's largest clinic that has openly experimented in stem-cell therapy for the past 15 years and administers hundreds of anti-ageing therapies a year.

The promise: Treatments range from the injection of stem cells from animals such as cows and pigs to injecting cells taken from the umbilical cords or livers of aborted human foetuses. 'Foetal tissue has been shown to be highly rich in regenerative stem cells which, when injected into adults, helps the body fight the ageing process,' says Dr Elena Bochkaryova.

'I have had patients who leave my clinic after a course of injections looking and feeling ten years younger than when they came in.' The reality: RUSSIA and the Ukraine currently top the world abortion league, with more of the operations carried out here than anywhere else on earth. Evidence gathered by the Moscow police department has shown a growing black market in aborted foetuses, which are smuggled into Russia from the Ukraine and Georgia.

Here, poverty-stricken young women are paid 200 U.S. dollars to carry babies up to the optimum eight to 12-week period - thought to be best for harvesting stem cells. They are then sold on to cosmetic clinics.

'The cavalier attitude of Russian cosmetic surgeons is grotesque,' says Dr Minger. 'The origin of the cells is ethically immoral. Furthermore, they don't bother to test for compatibility between the cells injected and the patient who receives them. Medical risks from complications can include infection, tumours and rejection of foreign tissue.'

Destination: Dominican Republic

Medra Clinic

The treatment: Foetal stem-cell injections from £15,000. Malibu psychiatrist William Rader, 67, previously owned a string of private clinics in LA dedicated to treating eating disorders. He recently founded Medra to offer stem-cell treatments to wealthy clients who wanted to combine a holiday on the exotic La Romana beach resort in the Dominican Republic with their stem-cell therapy.

He has arranged for hundreds of patients to be injected with cells taken from six to 12-week-old aborted foetuses since the clinic opened its doors. Initial consultations are done at Rader's LA surgery at Malibu beach. Arrangements are then made for patients to fly out to the luxury resort in the Dominican Republic to have the treatment administered. The promise: According to Medra's website, the foetal stem cell 'detects and then attempts to repair any damage or deficit discovered in the body, as well as releasing growth factors, which stimulate the body's own repair mechanisms.

'Stem-cell therapy is the future. It's just unfortunate that there is so much opposition to it in the West,' Rader says.

The reality: Debra Huff-Rader, director of physician and patient relations, is deliberately vague when I ask where the foetuses are sourced, saying only that they are from the former Soviet republic of Georgia. But she invites me to speak with Rader himself.

'Because Rader is acting outside America, his work falls outside U.S. regulations on stem-cell therapy,' says Dr Minger. 'Patients risk at best wasting a lot of money on a treatment that is not proven in clinical trials and at worst one that is putting their health at serious risk.'

Destination: Rotterdam

The PMC clinic

The treatment: Anti-ageing stem-cell injections composed of umbilical cord blood - £8,500. Consultations cost £150 per hour and take place in London's Wimpole Street with Dr Robert Trossell. His patients fly out to Holland, where treatment is carried out. Antiageing treatments involve being injected with stem cells extracted from the umbilical cords of babies who have had a natural birth to full term.

The promise: 'Umbilical cord stem cells are the youngest, safely available stem cells,' claims the website. 'We have never had any negative side-effects. Because of the purity of the stem cells, the body will not recognise them as invaders.'

I am reassured by Dr Trossell's Londonbased assistant that it is perfectly safe and easy to arrange, although they are so busy that I must wait over a month for my initial appointment and then a further three months before treatment.

The reality: 'There is no convincing evidence that what the PMC clinic is doing actually works or is safe,' says Dr Minger. 'To state that these cells cannot be rejected is false. This treatment runs the risk of serious infection, tumours and cancer.

'To inject cells from one human being into another, a range of checks must be made to make sure they genetically match each other. Without being properly regulated, you cannot trust that the clinic will do this. At the least you risk being ripped off, at most developing a serious illness.'

Destination: New York

The Nabi Medspa

The treatment: The Frozen in Time Stem-Cell Facial - £150. The latest beauty treatment to hit Manhattan's spa scene has, according to the owner, already drawn a host of customers from the UK and Europe as well as wealthy New Yorkers. The facial involves an exfoliation and steam. The face is then covered in a moisturiser composed of cells harvested from the embryonic fluid of pregnant cows. The result according to Nabi's owner Ivy Cho is ' biological supremacy over ageing skin'.

The promise: The spa claims that introducing live stem cells from cows helps your skin cells - which may be damaged by ' environmental factors' - restore and replicate themselves, creating healthier, stronger, more youthful-looking skin.

'The treatment is originally from France and has become popular with premium customers,' says a consultant at the spa who claims the cows are not hurt in any way during the process.

'We pat the liquid onto the face rather than rubbing it in, which breaks up the cells. It takes just an hour, but immediately afterwards your skin will feel hydrated, firmer and tighter, with a flawless glow. After six days your skin becomes radiant.' The reality: Scedptics argue that the treatment is useless. 'Rubbing on cow cells which have been previously frozen and are consequently dead is of no use at all. In any case, simply putting them onto the surface of the skin means they could never actually seep in to the body,'says Dr Minger.

'This treatment is farcical. Why would putting the cells of cows on to a human being's skin rejuvenate it? It's just not possible. Any woman who wants to rejuvenate her skin should simply eat healthily and invest in a good facial moisturiser.'


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: abortion; ageing; bioethics; bravenewworld; cultureofdeath; moloch; moralabsolutes; skintreatment; stemcells
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To: wagglebee

"In America, President Bush has denounced stem- cell therapy even for medical purposes as 'godless', vetoing any public funding"

Andrea Thompson better get her facts straight. Bush and pro-life people have always supported adult stem cells (and umbilical cords and blood from them fall into the adult stem cell category). There is so much misinformation in the news media about stem cell research that it is not surprising the general public doesn't understand it. Of course, such misunderstanding works for the "give us death" crowd very well.


41 posted on 08/07/2006 9:50:14 AM PDT by conservative blonde (Conservative Blonde)
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To: CobaltBlue

Don't be naive. The author knows the difference but she is banking on the fact that the reader doesn't.


42 posted on 08/07/2006 9:53:48 AM PDT by conservative blonde (Conservative Blonde)
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To: .cnI redruM
It must be so bitter for some women to get old and realize that men think chubby teenager girls are beautiful.

The women in the article remind me of the wicked queen from Snow White.
43 posted on 08/07/2006 10:40:30 AM PDT by after dark ('Tis now the very witching time of night;)
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To: All

"In America, President Bush has denounced stem- cell therapy even for medical purposes as 'godless'..."

NO, NO, and NO. Yet another lie to add murk to the ethical waters rising around the subject of stem cell research. President Bush has denounced EMBRYONIC stem cell research. It is a well documented fact that therapy and treatment using ADULT stem cells, not dependent on the murder of children, has been successful, while EMBRYONIC stem cell research, a sub rosa extension of the effort to institutionalize for all time abortion throughout the world, has accomplished nothing. The lies continue.


44 posted on 08/07/2006 11:07:30 AM PDT by DPMD (dpmd)
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To: .cnI redruM
Seriously, I want to ask Andrea what would possess her to write an article about a subject on which she obviously does not have even the slightest grasp on the most basic level.

There is no moral conflict in using stem cells gathered from umbilical cords. You can eat an umbilical cord sandwich if you like, or wear an umbilical cord hat if that's your fancy. It's gross, but you're not hurting anybody else.

45 posted on 08/07/2006 11:12:58 AM PDT by dead (I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
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To: wagglebee

Seriously disturbing, in many ways. I find it odd that many on this thread seem to either have not read the entire article, or for some reason conclude none of it is true. I wonder why?

The cells from umbilical cords are the least of it; at least no harm has been done to anyone (that is, if the procedure is really safe for the recipient).

But much of the article is about using aborted babies or embryos. It is repellent and nightmarish in the extreme, and also vile that so many women are willing to be guinea pigs for their supposedly increased youth and beauty at the expense of death and suffering of others.

Word Gone Mad.


46 posted on 08/07/2006 12:12:41 PM PDT by little jeremiah
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To: dead

Did you not read the parts of the article in which she discusses using tissues from aborted babies?


47 posted on 08/07/2006 12:14:03 PM PDT by little jeremiah
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To: little jeremiah
Yes, I read it and understood it perfectly. Thanks for asking. It further illustrated her inability to distinguish between the ethically-neutral types of stem cell procedures and those that are controversial.

Did you not read this?

In America, President Bush has denounced stem- cell therapy even for medical purposes as 'godless', vetoing any public funding

She is wrong, either intentionally misrepresenting the facts, or ignorant of them.

48 posted on 08/07/2006 12:20:46 PM PDT by dead (I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
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To: dead

So the article is not perfect. But she does indeed go into some rather gruesome detail about using tissues from aborted babies - some apparently conceived for the purpose of killing them and using their tissues - for "medical" purposes. Did you not see that part?

You seem to be picking up on some ambiguity and ignoring the fact that people are using and advocating that which is patently evil and cruel.


49 posted on 08/07/2006 12:27:38 PM PDT by little jeremiah
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To: little jeremiah
Did you not see that part?

Did you not see where I specifically stated that I saw that part?

I don’t know why you need to keep asking me these annoying questions. I said I read the article and I understood it.

I took issue with the writer's inability to distinguish between the gruesome horrific forms of stem cell treatment (yes, I read that part) and the perfectly acceptable forms. As far as I can see, my point was perfectly clear to everybody who read it, except you, and my sentiments were shared by a majority of people on this thread.

And before you ask me again, yes I did read where she described some of the more horrific procedures.

50 posted on 08/07/2006 12:41:46 PM PDT by dead (I've got my eye out for Mullah Omar.)
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To: dead
If that were the only place they got their stem clells, this would be a non-sequitor. Kind of like the stupid botox fad. But it is not.
51 posted on 08/07/2006 1:08:20 PM PDT by .cnI redruM (Those who don't fight evil condemn those who do.)
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To: .cnI redruM

"Oh, no - we'd NEVER kill babies on purpose just to get their cells! It would never come to THAT!" I predict farms in the U.S. in 15-20 years.


52 posted on 08/07/2006 1:55:39 PM PDT by AmericanChef
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To: .cnI redruM

I'll bet she has more plastic on her front end than a 99 Neon.


53 posted on 08/07/2006 2:06:43 PM PDT by BigCinBigD (Merry Christmas!)
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To: .cnI redruM

This is just gruesome.


54 posted on 08/07/2006 9:43:59 PM PDT by Salem (FREE REPUBLIC - Fighting to win within the Arena of the War of Ideas! So get in the fight!)
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To: .cnI redruM

Tell me again why the Nazi experiments were evil?


55 posted on 08/07/2006 9:47:44 PM PDT by ValerieUSA
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To: thiscouldbemoreconfusing
Sadder still is this hate-filled dead soul 'journalist': In America, President Bush has denounced stem- cell therapy even for medical purposes as 'godless' ... The lie is so blatant that most will likely read right over it without noticing and just swallow the lie. It is getting astonishing how often the dead souled are spittling out this purposed obfuscation reagrding stem cells, conflating adult stem cells (cord blood stem cells) with embryonic stem cells (derived by blasting open the encapsulation of the balstocyst to get at the body parts, the embryonic stem cells). There was even a panel discussion on C-Span this evening where ethics directors for Harvard and Stanford consciously conflated the two trying to blur the truth so their audience (TV and live) would embrace embryo slaughteirng for stem cells. It is a sickening indication of how far down our nation has degenerated that such open lying is ignored.
56 posted on 08/07/2006 9:55:21 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote life support for others.)
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To: .cnI redruM
Injecting botulism into the freggin` face now this; Injecting afterbirth. Will John Kerry ever stop with his beauty treatments?


57 posted on 08/08/2006 12:42:10 AM PDT by Screamname (Batman and Godzilla : When will they fight?)
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To: ValerieUSA
I'm not sure. I went to college in the late 20th Century and learned that it was all just relative.
58 posted on 08/08/2006 4:42:39 AM PDT by .cnI redruM (Those who don't fight evil condemn those who do.)
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To: .cnI redruM; 2ndMostConservativeBrdMember; afraidfortherepublic; Alas; al_c; american colleen; ...
Babies -- Bought, Sold and Traded, in the Ukraine they sold baby parts for Skin Rejuvination, in Canada they sold "fresh" embryos for embryonic stem cell research and in the USA, physicians pressure parents to abort babies with certain birth defects. 

59 posted on 08/09/2006 5:39:52 PM PDT by Coleus (Roe v. Wade and Endangered Species Act both passed in 1973, Murder Babies/save trees, birds, algae)
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To: .cnI redruM
Notice how carefully they avoid the word, EMBYONIC, stem cell. This EMBYRONIC stem cell hullabaloo is ONLY on WIDHFUL thinking. NOTHING has substantiated it and I doubt it will do what they want it to.

The hope and progress has been with ADULT stem cells.
60 posted on 08/09/2006 7:47:06 PM PDT by nmh (Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God) .)
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