Tuesday, 19 February 2008

stem cell scientists seize media agenda



Stem cell scientists seize the media agenda on human-animal embryos

Setting up a press briefing a few days before Christmas for a few days

after Christmas on an incredibly controversial subject with some of

the UK's most important scientists should have been a nightmare. In

fact the opposite was the case for the Science Media Centre after

eagled eyed Evan Harris MP and leading stem cell expert Stephen Minger

spotted a sentence in the Government's White Paper on fertility laws

published in late December which proposed a ban on the use of

human-animal hybrid embryos for research.

As emails started circulating with the text of the White Paper more

and more researchers expressed deep dismay that this important area of

stem cell research might be banned. I won't go into too much detail

about the science here - not least because unless you have been on

holiday in Antarctica - you are likely to have seen the specific

process described in great (and accurate) detail in everything from

The Sun to the BBC News at Ten. Put basically, what scientists want to

do is to further their understanding of certain diseases by studying

stem cells from cloned embryos, a process known as therapeutic

cloning. However because of the severe shortage of human eggs for this

kind of research some have applied to the HFEA for a license to use

animal eggs. What they would do is empty out the rabbit or cow egg and

put in the nucleus of a human cell - taken from an adult with the

disease they want to study - and induce it to become an early stage

embryo which would be destroyed at 14 days after they had derived the

disease specific stem cells.

What has worried stem cell researchers so much about this surprise

proposal is that no reason has been given for recommending a ban apart

from the strength of opposition to this research voiced by those who

responded to the Government's consultation on fertility laws. In other

words it looks like a government that has gone out of its way to

promote the importance of stem cell research may be about to ban one

aspect of it for no other reason than a perception that the public

don't like it - and the prospect of `frankenbunny' headlines.

The SMC has history on this issue - it was at our Fertility Rumble

press briefing this time last year that Chris Shaw, from Kings College

London, first told journalists that he and Ian Wilmut were amongst

others considering applying to use rabbit eggs to allow them to pursue

their therapeutic cloning research into motor neurone disease. Having

seen the media reaction and some of the `frankenbunny' headlines, we

immediately spoke to a group of stem cell experts and invited them

into the Centre to run a background briefing on these human-animal

hybrid embryos. We also continued to organise briefings and interviews

as the scientists submitted their applications to the HFEA later in

the year.

The SMC reacted to the news about a proposed ban by arguing that this

development should be seized as an opportunity to remind public and

policy makers this research is needed. We suggested an emergency media

briefing to take place in advance of a HFEA meeting scheduled for

early January where two applications to use animal eggs were due to be

discussed.

With the enthusiastic backing of their respective press officers, Ian

Wilmut from Edinburgh, Lyle Armstrong from Newcastle, Anne McLaren

from Cambridge and Chris Shaw and Stephen Minger from Kings College

arrived in the Centre on 4th January to face a room packed full with

science and health reporters from almost every conceivable national

newspaper and TV and radio station.

There's something special about a briefing like this where something

big is at stake and that's how it felt on the day. In what one

journalists described as a `feisty' briefing, these scientists made a

case for the use of rabbit or cow eggs that was compelling, humane,

reasoned, passionate and just plain convincing. The arguments just

kept coming: the cloned embryo is almost 100% human and the HFEA has

already licensed therapeutic cloning of human embryos; it will be

destroyed after 14 days; the stem cells are for research only and not

to be used as therapies in patients; there will be no living thing

produced; no-one is harmed by the research and so on and so on.

For me however the highlight of the briefings was when Chris Shaw, a

clinician who sees patients with motor neurone disease every day of

his life, told us that despite years and years of research the

scientific community has been unable to find a cure or even effective

treatments for this most terrible of terrible diseases. Suddenly the

moral equation seemed to have changed and it felt to me like it was

the Government and those seeking to ban this research who have a case

to answer - when tens of thousands of people are suffering and dying -

how can they morally justify closing the door on an avenue of research

that many experts agree offers real promise? Rather than scientists

playing with nature - these scientists came over as people dedicated

to improving the quality of life while their opponents are playing

politics and running scared of lurid headlines and the pro-life lobby.

Waiting for the media coverage from SMC briefings is always an anxious

affair - after all we specialise in presenting the most controversial

science subjects to the national news media - it's a risky business.

Though after 4 years at this job I have turned into something of a

cheerleader for the national media's specialist science and health

reporters and was less worried about their coverage than about their

headlines writers and picture editors. But despite a few images of

cute bunny rabbits and the more annoying pictures of 6 month old

foetuses in the womb, the coverage was overwhelmingly positive,

balanced and accurate. It was also everywhere! Many papers, including

The Times and the FT ran leaders supporting the researchers case and

many others ran supplementary `fact boxes' explaining the science in

great detail. The midnight embargo allowed the Today programme to run

not one, not two but three packages on the story as well as making it

their lead story on the news bulletins. And thanks to the wonderful

science reporters on the Daily Mail, that most important of newspapers

ran a beautiful piece pointing put the threat to patients if the HFEA

turned down applications for this groundbreaking research!

Such was the intensity of the coverage that health ministers who had

refused to put anyone up for interview on the Today programme had to

change their mind and agree to an interview on The World at One. And

after a week of answering stupid questions about his Christmas holiday

in the Bee Gees' mansion, Tony Blair returned to face very serious

questions about his Government's intention to ban important stem cell

research. His response - that he felt sure this research would be

allowed to go forward if it could be shown to improve the quality of

life for ill people - has given the researchers hope that this

wrong-headed proposal won't make it through to the final legislation.

In the days that followed more of the same kind of media coverage

appeared with the scientific community keeping the pressure up with a

joint letter to The Times organised by Evan Harris MP and signed by 50

leading experts including three Nobel prize winners and the head of

the Royal Society. By this stage other prominent scientists were

entering the debate with statements of support from people like Mark

Walport from the Wellcome Trust, Colin Blakemore and Chris Higgins

form the MRC and many medical ethicists. Within the space of a week

there had been so much media coverage of this issue across the whole

spectrum of tabloids, broadsheets, radio, TV, on-line etc that few

people in the UK could claim to not have heard about human animal

embryos. And because the coverage was generated by the scientists, it

was their message on this research that came over loud and clear.

Interestingly the on-line opinion polls carried out after people had

heard the issues explained by the researchers came out very

differently to the government's consultation with nearly 60% of those

polled by BBC on-line voting in favour of licensing this research.

So even by the SMC's standards the first week of 2007 has been both

exciting and satisfying. But I hope it will be more than that - I hope

that the way these scientists reacted to the threat to their research

can act as a model of how scientists should react when other crucial

science is under threat. These scientists have done everything right.

They have been briefing science and health journalists at every stage

of their application to do this research so that by the time the

government signalled a plan to ban the research all the key

journalists in the national news media already understood the complex

science and the compelling case for the research. I have no doubt

whatsoever that the media coverage was so good because of the

established relationship between these two groups.

Secondly these scientists seized the media agenda in an exemplary way.

Despite voices suggesting that lobbying MPs should be done in private

and that we should wait to see what the HFEA decided before going to

the press, the scientists agreed with the press officers involved that

by proactively briefing the media in advance of the HFEA discussion

they would have more chance of getting the science across in an

accurate and balanced way. This kind of boldness and pro-active

approach to influencing public and political discussion is rare in

science and obviously scientists rightly don't want to turn into

campaigners - but occasionally there will be policy decisions that are

bad for science and bad for society and the scientists doing this

research deserve to have their voices heard in the national debate.

A week after our briefing the HFEA announced it would not follow the

Government in seeking a ban on research on human animal embryos but

will launch a public consultation in which the scientists will be

invited to play a significant role. A victory for a brave pioneering

group of scientists whose voice was made loud and strong and

influential because they were prepared to engage with the media on

this most controversial of subjects - the Science Media Centre was

proud to be associated with it.

Posted by Fiona Fox at 13:36


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