Stem cell laws and policy in Iran

Iran's flexible approach towards stem-cell research is linked to the Shia tradition being flexible enough to allow for ESCs science; the second is that the approval of ESCs research was made easier by permissive laws governing other areas of biomedicine, such as new assisted reproductive technologies; and the third is that Iran's lack of a public discussion of bioscience affects how its ESCs research policy is seen. In 2002 a fatwa was issued by the Supreme Leader of Iran regarding the permissibility of "destruction of residual embryos from the in vitro fertilization cycle for the purpose of obtaining stem cells for research purposes" as accreditation for the country's ESCs scientific community.

Source: Wikipedia — Stem cell laws and policy in Iran (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Stem cell laws and policy in Iran

Iran's flexible approach towards stem-cell research is linked to the Shia tradition being flexible enough to allow for ESCs science; the second is that the approval of ESCs research was made easier by permissive laws governing other areas of biomedicine, such as new assisted reproductive technologies; and the third is that Iran's lack of a public discussion of bioscience affects how its ESCs research policy is seen. In 2002 a fatwa was issued by the Supreme Leader of Iran regarding the permissibility of "destruction of residual embryos from the in vitro fertilization cycle for the purpose of obtaining stem cells for research purposes" as accreditation for the country's ESCs scientific community.

Source: Wikipedia "Stem cell laws and policy in Iran" · CC BY-SA 4.0

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