The Trump administration created a federal ethics advisory board to evaluate research involving fetal tissue. As the New York Times reported, the result was predictable.
A new federal ethics advisory board created to evaluate scientific research involving fetal tissue has advised the Trump administration to reject funding for nearly every proposal it considered — a de facto government ban on the work. In a report issued on Tuesday, the Human Fetal Tissue Research Ethics Advisory Board, established in February by the Department of Health and Human Services, recommended against funding 13 of 14 research proposals. Health Secretary Alex M. Azar II will make the final decision, but the panel’s opinion is expected to hold great weight.
Two members of the group issued an unsigned dissent, explaining that the fix was in. “This board was clearly constituted … so as to include a large majority of members who are on the public record as being opposed to human fetal tissue research of any type,” they said. “This was clearly an attempt to block funding of as many contracts and grants as possible.”
Circling back to our earlier coverage, one of the elements of the fight that’s so exasperating is the extent to which fetal-tissue research hasn’t been much of a political issue in recent decades. There was, by and large, a political consensus that there are no medical or scientific reasons to curtail the area of study.
After an abortion, fetal tissue can either be discarded or used in potentially life-saving medical research. Reproductive rights can be a contentious issue for a variety of reasons, but this facet of the debate seems uncomplicated. (It’s worth emphasizing that some tissue used in research comes from fetuses that were not intentionally aborted.)
It’s precisely why support for fetal-tissue research has been broad and bipartisan for many years. When Congress passed a law authorizing the research in 1993, the vote in the Senate was 93 to 4.









