Amid the news explosion that followed President Trumps    COVID-19 diagnosis and brief convalescence earlier this month,    there was a nugget you might have missed: The antibody    treatment from biotech company Regeneron the president    tookseemingly to great effecthad been developed in part by    means of cells derived from fetal tissue.  
    Most of the discussion around this revelation concerned whether    it showed the president to be a hypocriteeither personally    because of his stated pro-life beliefs, or as a matter of    policy because his administration has suspended federal funding    for scientific research involving fetal tissue. (Both claims    were dubious: There was no reason to believe the president knew    the provenance of the Regeneron cocktail when he was treated    with it, and the kind of fetal-derived cells used to develop    the drug were not included in the administrations funding    freeze.)  
    But the news portended a larger problem that may prove    important in months to come: the ethical objections    other pro-life people may have to new COVID    treatmentsincluding vaccineswith similar issues in their    development history.  
    I think its going to test our convictions about these    things, said Dr. C. Ben Mitchell, a professor of moral    philosophy at evangelical Union University and senior fellow at    the Center for Bioethics & Human Dignity. Whether or not    we are going to be consistent with our convictions.  
    Beyond the central aim of ending legal abortion, no issue has    so united the pro-life movement over the last few decades as    the push to prevent fetal and embryonic remains from being used    in medical research. In the 2000s, the battle involved     embryonic stem cell research: President Bush prohibited    federal funding for research involving new embryonic stem cell    lines in 2001, a policy President Obama reversed in 2009. More    recently, the issue has been researchers use of fresh tissue    from recent abortions, following activist David Daleidens 2015    expos on     Planned Parenthoods practice of selling organs from    aborted fetuses to medical research companies.  
    But while pushing for public policy changes and supply chain    reforms to make researchers less reliant on ongoing abortions,    pro-lifers have also struggled with a parallel issue on a more    personal level: whether its permissible to make use of    treatments developed via the use of fetal tissue that already    exist. If abortion is evil, they ask themselves, then can I in    good conscience allow myself to benefit from medicines that    rely on the practice?  
    Such questions are complicated by the fact that, unlike the    tissue research that has dominated pro-life policy space in    recent years, many medical products in current use, including a    number of childhood vaccines, have a connection to abortion    that is distant and tenuous. The cell cultures used in    developing such medicines are most accurately described not as    fetal cells themselves, but as cells that are    fetal-derived: Cells originally taken from an aborted    fetus that have been cultivated to multiply freely ever since.  
    The most widely used of these cell lines date back to just a    handful of abortions in Europe in the 1960s. The WI-38 cell    line, which has been used to develop vaccines for rubella,    rabies, measles, mumps, and various other diseases, is derived    from the lung tissue of a fetus aborted in Sweden in 1962; The    MRC-5 line, used to produce vaccines for Hepatitis A and polio,    dates back to 1966. Other lines are used for other purposes:    HEK293 cells, which are derived from fetal kidney cells    isolated in the Netherlands in the early 1970s, can be used to    create virus-like cells that arent able to infect humans.    Researchers use these     pseudoviruses to test new therapeutics without having to    handle live virus themselves, reducing the need for extreme    biosafety precautions in laboratory settings. (The    aforementioned Regeneron made use of HEK293 cells in this way.)  
    These cell cultures wont reproduce infinitely, but saying so    almost feels like a technicality: Descendants of the WI-38 and    MRC-5 lines have been used to create hundreds of millions of    doses of vaccines over the past half-century.  
    Going by any sort of costbenefit analysis, the use of these    cell lines has been a force for good in the world. By making    use of the remains of a bare handful of elective    abortionsabortions that would have taken place whether or not    researchers decided to use thema staggering number of people    around the world have been spared the miseries of a whole host    of wretched and deadly diseases.  
    But for those who advocate for decoupling from such practices,    simply to use the language of cost and benefit in the first    place is to give away the game. If thats the measure, they    argue, its hard to see how you could oppose any    promising medical research, even the most depraved: How can you    weigh the suffering of a few unfortunates against the ongoing    benefits to all humanity of curing a deadly disease?  
    These sorts of ethical questions arent the exclusive domain of    the pro-life movement. What posture we ought to take toward    ill-gotten medical research is a question that has long    occupied bioethicists, given how much of the science    underpinning our current understanding and practice of medicine    was conducted in unethical waysoften even by the standards of    their own time, and even more so by the more exacting standards    of the present.  
    The classic example, of course, is the gruesome human    experimentation carried out by Nazi doctors in concentration    camps, but there are examples closer to home, too: black men in    Alabama whose untreated syphilis was allowed to fester    for decades so government researchers could observe the    progress of the disease, all the while assuring the subjects    they were being treated; developmentally disabled children in    New York given     chocolate milk laced with feces to deliberately infect them    with hepatitis as part of an effort to develop a vaccine.  
    Other ethical issues involve the origin of immortalized cell    cultures in particular. The longevity of these cell lines is    such that many of them predate modern medical standards on    ethical human research, which werent truly codified until the    National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of    Biomedical and Behavior Research, established by Congress for    the purpose in 1974, published its     Belmont Report in 1979. The oldest such cell line in    existence is a culture of cervical cancer cells taken from a    woman named Henrietta Lacks in 1951, who died of the disease    that same year. Lacks never consented to having her cells    cultured; nor did the women who obtained the abortions that    resulted in the WI-38 or MRC-5 cells.  
    These fraught ethical issues are not a thing of the past. After    decades of lobbying, the Lacks family finally won a     partial concession from the National Institutes of Health    in 2013 to place some restrictions on medical access to    information about their relatives cells. Pro-life    organizations continually push for researchers to divest from    and seek alternatives to fetal cell cultures as well.  
    For some pro-life bioethicists, the vast distance between the    harm of the original abortion and the use of the modern    treatment in which it resulted means that, while policymakers    and biotech firms still have a moral obligation to work toward    developing ethically unproblematic alternatives, individuals    dont necessarily have a moral duty to abstain from such    treatments themselves. Medical ethics are complicated and a    matter of conscience, said Tiffany Manor, who directs the Life    Ministry of the conservative Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod.    Some modern medical procedures result from past research that    was conducted unethically. That doesnt mean that we ought to    throw out all of the beneficial procedures.  
    But others argue that individuals retain a moral duty to keep    pressure on the medical research industry by declining the use    of such treatments when possible without creating grave risks    to public health. The Catholic Churchs Pontifical Academy for    Life tried to strike such a balance     when it considered the question in 2005:  
      On a cultural level, the use of such vaccines contributes in      the creation of a generalized social consensus to the      operation of the pharmaceutical industries which produce them      in an immoral way. Therefore, doctors and fathers of families      have a duty to take recourse to alternative vaccines (if they      exist), putting pressure on the political authorities and      health systems so that other vaccines without moral problems      become available. They should take recourse, if necessary, to      the use of conscientious objection with regard to the use of      vaccines produced by means of cell lines of aborted human      foetal origin.    
    The document goes on:  
      As regards the diseases against which there are no      alternative vaccines which are available and ethically      acceptable, it is right to abstain from using these vaccines      if it can be done without causing children, and indirectly      the population as a whole, to undergo significant risks to      their health.    
    You can see the precarious moral tightrope here: It is good, in    the mind of pro-life ethicists, to attempt as much as possible    not to participate, however indirectly, in the evil act of a    long-ago abortion. But one ought not strain so hard to avoid    that participation that one thoughtlessly commits    another evil act: allowing oneself or ones children    to become vectors of otherwise preventable disease, spreading    suffering and even death to those around them.  
    All this, remember, is just the moral calculus that surrounds    such vaccine under normal medical circumstances. Throw    in a global pandemic and an unprecedented race to treat and    cure it, and you begin to get a sense of the scale of the    ethical headaches involved.  
    Take the issue of Regeneron. Since his own positive experience    with the companys antibody cocktail, REGN-COV2, President    Trump has become its biggest cheerleader; pushing for it to    play a major role in COVID treatment going forward. We have    hundreds of thousands of doses that are just about ready. I    have emergency use authorization all set, he said on October    7. Youre gonna get better, and youre gonna get better really    fast.  
    But both Regenerons drug and     a similar antibody treatment currently being developed by    Eli Lilly     made use of fetal tissue in their developmentnot in the    actual manufacture of the drug, as mentioned above, but in    creating neutered pseudoviruses to test its effectiveness.  
    Imagine a person whose doctor has recommended such a drug    trying to make a decision in the light of the moral principles    suggested by the Pontifical Academy for Life. On the one hand,    the drug is a product of fetal tissue research in only the most    remote possible way. But the possibility of endangering others    by abstaining does not bear considering here, as the cocktail    is a treatment, not a vaccine. Further, it is unclear how a    person recommended such a treatment by a doctor ought to think    about the question of whether there are ethically acceptable    alternatives. Other drugs can help manage COVID, of course,    but generally speaking their effect is cumulative:    Dexamethasone and remdesivir are not replacements for    antibody therapy.  
    To cap the dilemma off, it isnt as though a pro-life person    could start off with unproblematic treatments and work up to    REGN-COV2 as a matter of last resort: Patients arent    prescribed antivirals or steroids for COVID unless theyre    already seriously sick, while antibody treatments like    Regenerons have been     shown to be helpful only if theyre given very early in the    course of the disease, before the bodys own immune response    has had a chance to kick in.  
    COVID vaccines in development present further difficulties.    First, we dont actually know which of the many vaccines    currently being developed will end up the first to pass muster    as a safe, effective, and mass-producible weapon against the    pandemic. Many of the candidates     do not make use of fetal-derived cells in any capacity.    Others use such cells only in confirmatory tests, as with    Regeneron. Still others use them in the production of the    vaccines themselves.  
    Of the four vaccines seemingly closest to release in America,    twothose being developed by Pfizer and Modernawere merely    tested on fetal-derived cells. Two others, from Johnson &    Johnson and AstraZeneca, are made with them. The latter    vaccines Phase III clinical trials were placed on hold earlier    this month, but     were resumed last week.  
    Under ordinary circumstances, this would be a no-brainer: Many    pro-life people would simply wait for one of the less    objectionable vaccines to become available. But during the    coronavirus pandemic, where every day that goes by without a    vaccine is critical, what happens if Johnson & Johnson or    AstraZenecas product is first past the post, and the federal    government invests heavily in its development and distribution?  
    Its unclear whether such a situation would provoke a legal    clash. The federal government doesnt have the constitutional    authority to mandate vaccines, but states and cities can; all    50 states require children to receive a battery of vaccines    before attending public school, although all offer various    exemptions for religious, philosophical, and/or other reasons.    Whether citizens have a right to such exemptions,    however, is less clear: the Supreme Court has upheld    mandatory vaccination programs in the past and has separately    ruled that the right to practice religion freely does not    include liberty to expose the community or the child to    communicable disease.  
    Theres no reason to believe yet that states will choose to go    that route. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, whose state was racked    by the coronavirus this spring and who last year signed a state    law     ending religious exemptions for childhood vaccines, is thus    far messaging that an eventual COVID vaccine     will be available to all New York residents who want one.  
    The likelier scenario may be that such a clash will instead    simply play out in the court of public opinion.  
    One of the nightmare scenarios Ive been thinking about is,    say we get a safe and effective vaccine, and it comes from what    many would regard as tainted sources, said Mitchell. And so    pro-lifers decide not to use the vaccinethey wont be    vaccinated. My guess is that there would be a huge uprising in    the society saying, Well, youre posing now a public health    risk. We now have a vaccine, but youre choosing not to use it.    Youre exposing others to it by not taking the vaccine, or    youre going to cost our health care system huge amounts of    money in treating you when we have a vaccine that could prevent    getting COVID-19, but you choose not to. So I think those are    going to be an important test of our convictions.  
    Photograph by Paul Hennessy/NurPhoto/Getty Images.  
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Is the Pro-Life Movement on a Collision Course with the Coronavirus? - The Dispatch