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 Abortion Non-Discrimination Act (ANDA)
 Assisted Suicide
 Born-Alive Infants Protection Act
 Child Custody Protection Act
 Conscience Protection
 District of Columbia Abortion Funding
 Embryo/Fetal Research
 Federal Employees' Health Benefits (FEHB)
 Fetal Tissue Research
 Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE)
 Freedom of Choice Act (FOCA)
 Health Care Reform
 Human Cloning
 Human Life Amendment
 Hyde Amendment
 Medical Training Non-Discrimination (ACGME)
 Mexico City Policy
 Military Abortion Policy
 Morning-After Pill
 Parental Notification
 Partial-Birth Abortion
 Prison Abortion Funding
 RU-486: Chemically Induced Abortion
 Stem Cell Research
 Terri Schiavo Dies
 Umbilical Cord Blood Banks
 Unborn Victims of Violence Act
 United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)

Embryo/Fetal Research

Two research questions need to be distinguished: research using living tissue from human embryos and fetuses who have been aborted and research on live human embryos and fetuses.

Research using the living tissue from aborted embryos and fetuses for transplant therapy (fetal tissue transplant research) was debated prominently in the early 1990s.

Research on living human embryos was restricted in the 1970s. Over the years efforts were made to loosen these restrictions. In 1995 Congress countered such efforts by passing the Dickey-Wicker Amendment that legislatively banned funding research harmful to the human embryo. Research using living human tissue from living embryos developed a prominence beginning in the later 1990s. This debate evolved as interest focused on taking early embryonic stem cells (pluripotent cells) from living embryos (a process that kills the embryos) and using those cells for research (embryonic stem cell research) or for cloning (“therapeutic cloning”). Also see: Fetal Tissue Research; Human Cloning and Stem Cell Research.

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