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IEET > Security > SciTech > Life > Innovation > Health > Fellows > Linda Glenn

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Call 1-800-New-Organ, by 2020?


Linda MacDonald Glenn
Linda MacDonald Glenn
Sentient Developments

Posted: Nov 17, 2009

Growing a set of new teeth, or new kidneys, or new eyes, or whatever it is you need, is something we could do as soon as 2020, according to a report that was issued by the Department of Health and Human Services a few years ago.

The U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) uses the term ‘regenerative medicine’ interchangeably with ‘tissue engineering’ and defines it as “a rapidly growing multidisciplinary field involving the life, physical and engineering sciences that seeks to develop functional cell, tissue, and organ substitutes to repair, replace or enhance biological function that has been lost due to congenital abnormalities, injury, disease, or aging.”

And researchers are doing amazing things: Gizmodo has posted videos from Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine, about how lab-grown tissues are benefiting patients now.




Regenerative nanomedicine will, understandably, likely be embraced for all the promise it holds—but there have been concerns expressed about the ethical, legal, and social implications, particularity the nano part. Nanotechnology has the potential to have the greatest impact in three areas: energy, medicine, and environmental remediation. Of these three areas, nanotechnology in medicine is the most likely to be accepted by the public, starting with therapeutic treatments and then moving over to enhancements. But it does raise some interesting questions, such as can nanomedicine be considered separate and apart other nanotechnologies? And what does ‘nanotechnology’ encompass anyway? Pinning down a usable definition of nanotechnology has been harder than anticipated.

For a quick peek into some of the issues, you can check out the series of YouTube videos my colleague and I did at the Human Enhancement Conference in Kalamazoo, Michigan, earlier this year. I’m also following Gizmodo’s feature “This Cyborg Life” and am intrigued by the question, what is the enhancement that you would like to have the most? (And keep it decent, folks, comments are moderated!)

I’ll tell you mine, if you tell me yours…


Linda MacDonald Glenn is fellow of the IEET, and a bioethicist, healthcare educator, lecturer, consultant and attorney. Linda also serves as a Scholar of the Women’s Bioethics Project.
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