HHS won’t use taxpayer dollars for research using aborted fetal tissue
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is banning the use of human fetal tissue sourced from elective abortion in federally funded research.
Under the new policy, researchers and institutions cannot receive National Institutes of Health funding if their research involves “the study, analysis, or use of primary HFT [human fetal tissue], cells, and derivatives, and human fetal primary cell cultures obtained from elective abortions.”
Already-established human fetal cell lines, such as HEK 293, are exempt from the ban, according to NIH’s grant-funded research requirements.
“HHS is ending the use of human fetal tissue from elective abortions in agency-funded research and replacing it with gold-standard science,” HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said. “The science supports this shift, the ethics demand it, and we will apply this standard consistently across the Department.”
HHS Press Secretary Emily Hilliard also clarified that “elective abortions” refers “to abortion on demand, not for direct medical necessity.”
The announcement came Friday, the day of the National March for Life, where Vice President J.D. Vance praised the Trump administration’s change.
“We have been responsible stewards of your tax dollars on this question of life…we’ve reinstated a ban on fetal tissue in federal research,” Vance said at the event.
“We’ve made tremendous strides over the last year, and we’re going to continue to make strides over the next three years to come,” he added.
The administration also recently launched a fraud investigation into 38 affiliates of Planned Parenthood, which provides abortions.
It alleged that the affiliates may have unlawfully received a total of $88 million through the COVID-19 era Paycheck Protection Program, meant to support struggling small businesses, by misrepresenting their organization size or affiliation.
“Planned Parenthood Federation of America was never eligible to receive a dime in pandemic-era relief from taxpayers,” Small Business Administration Administrator Kelly Loeffler said. “As part of the review underway, not only will we expose the Planned Parenthood affiliates who took advantage of the American people – we will take every necessary step to force every bad actor to pay them back.”
PPFA has denied the accusations and called them “politically motivated intimidation tactics.”
Latest News Stories
Advocates call on tax reform to reduce national debt
Supreme Court allows mail-order abortion drugs
McCuskey, coalition of AGs urge SEC to review OpenAI
Springfield strains for balanced budget; Illinois revenue forecast shifts down
DOJ targets healthcare fraud in California, Arizona, Nevada
Illinois Quick Hits: University of Chicago to offer free tuition
Human capabilities focused in student, teacher artificial intelligence guide
U.S. House to vote on bills targeting fraudulent, foreign election donations
Responses due in Virginia redistricting appeal
Illinois Republicans blame taxes, lawsuits after Morton Salt exits Chicago
Data center regulations weighed; some worry over jobs, energy, taxes
Solutions differ for Chicago Public Schools’ potential $1B deficit