| Media Release | ||
|
For immediate release: Wednesday 14 December 2005 Call for xenotransplant ban continues CHRISTCHURCH, NEW ZEALAND: The NZ Anti-Vivisection Society Inc. (NZAVS) is continuing to call for the permanent ban of xenotransplantation, following the public release today of a Bioethics Council report. The Report focuses on the cultural, ethical and spiritual aspects of animal to human transplants, noting that it is not the Bioethics Council's role "to say whether or not xenotransplantation is safe or effective". (page 6) NZAVS Director Phil Clayton says, "the safety concerns regarding transmission of disease carrying organisms from animals to humans are more than enough to call for the present moratorium on xenotransplants to be transformed into a permanent ban." "Bacteria, prions, fungi and viruses are potential dangers that could be transmitted via xenotransplants, with the added risks of bypassing the body's natural barriers such as skin or gastro-intestrinal tract. Once inside the human body, these organisms could mutate into forms that could be fatal and easily transmissible form person to person. Xenotransplantation puts the public at risk.", he said. Phil Clayton Note to Editors: ENDS |
NZAVS | New Zealand Anti-Vivisection Society Incorporated |
www.nzavs.org.nz | 2005 |
||