Good morning, Mr. Chairman. My name is William F. Raub. I am the Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Science Policy within the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and
Evaluation, Department of Health and Human Services. I also am serving as the Acting
Executive Director of the National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC), pending
completion of recruitment for that position. I appreciate this opportunity to present background
information on NBAC and to describe its current activities.
Establishment of NBAC
President Clinton established NBAC by Executive Order dated October 3, 1995. The Order
describes the functions as follows:
"NBAC shall provide advice and make recommendations to the National Science and
Technology Council and to other appropriate government entities regarding the following
matters:
- the appropriateness of departmental, agency, or other governmental programs, policies,
assignments, missions, guidelines, and regulations as they relate to bioethical issues arising from
research on human biology and behavior; and
- applications, including the clinical applications, of that research.
- NBAC shall identify broad principles to govern the ethical conduct of research, citing
specific projects only as illustrations for such principles.
- NBAC shall not be responsible for the review and approval of specific projects.
- In addition to responding to requests for advice and recommendations from the National
Science and Technology Council, NBAC also may accept suggestions of issues for consideration
from both the Congress and the public. NBAC also may identify other bioethical issues for the
purpose of providing advice and recommendations, subject to the approval of the National
Science and Technology Council."
The Order also indicates that NBAC will terminate on October 3, 1997 unless extended
prior to that date.
The Assistant to the President for Science and Technology issued the Charter for NBAC in
July, 1996. In describing the functions of s the following:
"As a first priority, the Commission will direct its attention to consideration of.
- Protection of the rights and welfare of human research subjects; and
- Issues in the management and use of genetic information including but not limited to human gene patenting."
Also in July, 1996, the President appointed the members of NBAC. The Chairman is Harold T.
Shapiro, Ph.D., President of Princeton University.
Initial Activities of NBAC
NBAC held its first meeting on October 4, 1996. Following a series of background
presentations -- including remarks by the Assistant to the President for Science and Technology,
other Executive Branch staff, a legislative assistant to former Senator Hatfield and the minority
staff director of the Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs -- and a general discussion of the
President's charge to NBAC, Chairman Shapiro elected to create two subcommittees. The
Human Subjects Subcommittee, chaired by James Childress, Ph.D. of the University of Virginia,
has responsibility for examining the current system of protections for human research subjects --
with emphasis on determining whether research sponsors and performers are adhering to the so-
called "Common Rule" (i.e., a set of essentially identical regulations issued simultaneously by 16
agencies of the Federal Government on July 18, 1991) and whether the rule itself is adequate to
assess the ethical issues associated with current and future research endeavors. The Genetics
Subcommittee, chaired by Thomas H. Murray, Ph.D., of Case Western Reserve University, has
responsibility for examining the management and use of genetic information -- with emphasis on
the bioethical issues associated with the use of human tissue samples in genetics research.
Each of the two subcommittees has held a series of meetings toward fulfillment of their
respective tasks. They have identified information needs, discussed alternative strategies for
meeting them, and set priorities for follow-up efforts by individual commissioners and/or NBAC
staff. For example, as both subcommittees identify leading experts from relevant disciplines
from whom they wish to receive oral and/or written testimony, NBAC staff make the requisite
contractual and logistic arrangements. In addition, with respect to assessment of the Common
Rule, a DHHS staff group -- with guidance from the Human Subjects Subcommittee -- is
gathering pertinent information from the participating agencies so that the subcommittee and,
ultimately the full NBAC, will have a strong data base and set of analyses to facilitate its
assessment as to how well the system for protection of human research subjects is working.
As I will describe in more detail in a few minutes, President Clinton's request for a study of
the legal and ethical issues associated with cloning technology added a substantial task to
NBAC's agenda -- one that demands and is receiving intensive effort from all the
Commissioners. This unforeseen development caused both subcommittees to reformulate their
work plans for this year with a view to making them less labor- and time-intensive than they
otherwise would have been. Nevertheless, both subcommittees are intent upon providing
important substantive contributions in their respective areas in a sufficiently timely manner so
that. by October, 1997, the full NBAC can report findings and recommendations regarding
human-subjects protection and genetic testing over and beyond whatever findings and
recommendations it provides within the next few weeks with respect to cloning.
NBAC Study of Issues associated with Cloning Technology
NBAC's operating priorities for this year changed abruptly in the wake of press
announcements on February 23, 1997 that scientists in Scotland had cloned a lamb from a single
cell from the mammary tissue of a six-year-old ewe. The scientists' research report appeared in
that week's edition of the scientific journal Nature. On February 24, President Clinton sent a
letter to NBAC Chairman Shapiro requesting that "the National Bioethics Advisory Commission
undertake a thorough review of the legal and ethical issues associated with the use of this
(cloning) technology and report back to me within ninety days with recommendations on
Further, on March 4, President Clinton issued to possible federal actions to prevent its abuse".
Further, on March 4, President Clinton issued to the Heads of Executive Departments and
Agencies a memorandum entitled "Prohibition on Federal Funding for Cloning of Human
Beings". In that memorandum, he mentioned his assignment to NBAC -- noting that cloning
technology offers the potential for "enormous scientific breakthroughs that could offer benefits in
such areas as medicine and agriculture" while raising "profound ethical issues, particularly with
respect to its possible use to clone humans".
Since February 25, NBAC has devoted an extraordinary effort toward fulfilling President
Clinton's request. The Commissioners quickly developed a preliminary framework for the issues
they wished to address and organized themselves into several informal working groups so that
they initially could pursue various subsets of these issues in parallel. They then identified within
each issue area the specific topics for which they desired additional information; and they
provided guidance to NBAC staff regarding leading experts in relevant scientific or professional
disciplines who might be sources of -- or at least links to sources of -- such information.
Using this guidance, NBAC staff contracted for a series of special analyses on a variety of
topics including the state of the science related to cloning, the current array of state- and local-
level statutes that might affect cloning and/or cloning-related research, and the historical
experience with moratoria associated with other areas where rapid scientific advances raised
major ethical issues -- i.e, fetal research, gene therapy, and recombinant DNA research. Further,
NBAC staff invited experts in science, religion, ethics, and other relevant subject-matter areas to
address the Commission directly and participate in in-depth discussion of critical issues.
Moreover, NBAC staff made special efforts to accommodate within each meeting agenda thohat is,
because NBAC inevitably will focus on many issues that fall within the purview of the OPRR,
any NBAC assessments that relate to OPRR's activities -- whether favorable or otherwise -might
lack credibility in the eyes of some observers. After weighing these concerns, Secretary Shalala,
on November 1, 1996, reassigned responsibility for NBAC management and administrative
support to the Assistant Secretary for Health (ASH).-- who, in turn, requested that I provide
day-to-day oversight of the NBAC staff in my capacity as his Science Advisor. Subsequently, I
also assumed the role of Acting Executive Director, pending recruitment of an appropriately
qualified individual to fill this position on a regular basis; and I arranged for a DHHS staff
member thoroughly experienced in working with advisory commissions to serve as Acting
Deputy Executive Director.
The Department recently published the vacancy announcement for the position of NBAC
Executive Director. The position is classified within the Senior Executive Service and,
depending upon the qualifications of the individual selected, offers an annual salary in the range
of $104,000 to $120,000 and possibly higher if the individual selected is a physician. We expect
significant competition for this vacancy and look forward to receipt of applications by the
deadline -- June 4, 1997.
The NBAC staff currently consists of 8 full-time and 4 part-time individuals. As NBAC
activities continue to evolve, future staffing needshat is,
because NBAC inevitably will focus on many issues that fall within the purview of the OPRR,
any NBAC assessments that relate to OPRR's activities -- whether favorable or otherwise -might
lack credibility in the eyes of some observers. After weighing these concerns, Secretary Shalala,
on November 1, 1996, reassigned responsibility for NBAC management and administrative
support to the Assistant Secretary for Health (ASH).-- who, in turn, requested that I provide
day-to-day oversight of the NBAC staff in my capacity as his Science Advisor. Subsequently, I
also assumed the role of Acting Executive Director, pending recruitment of an appropriately
qualified individual to fill this position on a regular basis; and I arranged for a DHHS staff
member thoroughly experienced in working with advisory commissions to serve as Acting
Deputy Executive Director.
The Department recently published the vacancy announcement for the position of NBAC
Executive Director. The position is classified within the Senior Executive Service and,
depending upon the qualifications of the individual selected, offers an annual salary in the range
of $104,000 to $120,000 and possibly higher if the individual selected is a physician. We expect
significant competition for this vacancy and look forward to receipt of applications by the
deadline -- June 4, 1997.
The NBAC staff currently consists of 8 full-time and 4 part-time individuals. As NBAC
activities continue to evolve, future staffing needs will be assessed by the Executive Director in
consultation with Chairman Shapiro and in the context of available resources.
The budget for NBAC this year is approximately $1.6 million. Almost half of those funds
($760,000) are being provided by agencies of the U.S. Public Health Service -- namely, the
National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug
Administration, and the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research. The remainder of the
funds ($850,000) are being provided by six other Departments or Agencies -- namely, the
Department of Defense, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of Energy, the
Department of Agriculture, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and the National
Science Foundation. The Office of Science and Technology Policy within the Executive Office
of the President was instrumental in facilitating the arrangements for joint funding of NBAC.
Mr. Chairman, I know that I speak for my colleagues as well as myself in saying that we
are eager to facilitate the work of NBAC as best we can and that we feel privileged to work with
this capable and dedicated group of Commissioners. If you have questions, I will be pleased to
respond either now or for the record.