Hospital in China denies links to world’s first gene-edited babies

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
News of the world first ever gene-edited human babiesbeing born in China caused a huge stir on Monday after theMIT Technology Review and
theAssociated Pressbrought the project tolight
People in and outside China rushed to question the ethical implicationsof the scientific breakthrough, reportedly the fruit of a Chinese
researcher named He Jiankui from a university in Shenzhen. There another twist to the story. According to the AP, He had sought and received
approval from Shenzhen HarMoniCare Women and Children Hospitalto kick off the experiment
The MIT Technology Review report also linked to documentsstating that He research received the green light from HarMoniCare medical ethics
committee. When contacted by TechCrunch, however, a HarMoniCare spokesperson said she was not aware of He genetic test and that the hospital
is probing the validity of the circulated documents
TechCrunch will update when the case makes progress. &What we can say for sure is that the gene editing process did not take place at our
hospital
The babies were not born here either,& the spokesperson said of He project. He, who studied at Rice and StanfordUniversities, led a research
team at Southern University of Science and Technology which set out to eliminate the gene associated with HIV, smallpox, and cholera by
utilizing the CRISPR gene-editing tool, according to the MIT Technology Review
The technology is ethically fraught because changes to the embryo will pass on to future generations
He&sdaring initiative is set to cause debate at the upcomingSecond International Summit on Human Genome Editingin Hong Kong, which he will
attend. It also noteworthy that HarMoniCare belongs to the vast Putian network, a fold of 8,000 private healthcare providers originated from
Putian, Fujian province
That according to a list compiled by DXY.cn, a Chinese online community for healthcare professionals
Putian hospitals expanded across China quickly over the years with little government oversight until the death of a college student
In 2016, 21-year-old Wei Zexi died of cancer after receiving dubious treatment from a Putian hospital
The incident also provoked a publicoutcry over China largest search engine Baidu, which counted Putian hospitals as a major online
advertiser.