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June 2004

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SURVEY:  3 OUT OF 4 AMERICANS SUPPORT  NANCY REAGAN'S CALL FOR MORE STEM CELL RESEARCH

 

 First Survey Since Death of President Reagan Gauges Impact of Event on

Public Views; Strong Support for Research Seen Among Conservatives,

Independents and Fundamentalists.

 

 WASHINGTON, D.C.//June 16, 2004//By a decisive margin of 74-21 percent,

Americans support former First Lady Nancy Reagan's call for the Bush White

House to lift restrictions on stem cell research in order to look for

possible treatments for the Alzheimer's disease that afflicted former

President Ronald Reagan prior to his recent death, as well as the other

grave illnesses - including diabetes, Parkinson's, heart disease and

multiple sclerosis - that are suffered by millions of other Americans,

according to a new survey conducted by Opinion Research Corporation (ORC) on

behalf of the Results for America (RFA) project of the nonprofit and

nonpartisan Civil Society Institute.

 

 The first opinion survey of public attitudes about stem cell research to

be conducted since the death of President Reagan also found that 72 percent

of Americans say they are more likely in the wake of Reagan's passing to

support stem cell research, including 76 percent of moderates, 64 percent of

conservatives and 62 percent of fundamentalist or evangelical Christians.

Also, Nancy Reagan's clout in the national stem cell debate appears to have

risen sharply, with 80 percent of Americans viewing her as credible on the

issue, up from 65 percent in a separate survey conducted during March 2004

in 18 key states.

 

 Civil Society Institute President Pam Solo said: "We now can say with

certainty that the death of Ronald Reagan is altering the course of the

national dialogue about stem cell research.  When almost three out of four

Americans say that they are more likely to support stem cell research after

the death of President Reagan, what you are witnessing is a fundamental

shift in the way that average Americans think about this issue."

 

 ORC Senior Research Manager Wayne Russum said:  "What you see here is

really about as close to bipartisan and pan-religious agreement as you can

get in American today on any topic.  Three in four Americans (74 percent)

support Nancy Reagan's call for the White House to lift restrictions on stem

cell research to search for a possible cure for Alzheimer's disease and

other grave illnesses.  That high level of support for the former First

Lady's view on this issue translates into a solid majority of conservatives

(62 percent), fundamentalists/ evangelicals (62 percent) and moderates (79

percent)."

 

 In August 2001, the Bush administration imposed a major new restriction on

federal funding for embryonic stem cell research.  The restriction meant

that research on stem cell lines created before August 2001 could receive

funding, but prohibited support for research on stem cell lines developed

after that date.

 

 

 KEY FINDINGS

 

 * A strong majority of Americans support Nancy Reagan's call for the Bush

White House to lift restrictions on stem cell research that might help to

find cures for such ailments as the Alzheimer's disease that afflicted the

recently deceased President Ronald Reagan, as well as other illnesses such

as diabetes, Parkinson's, heart disease and multiple sclerosis.  By a margin

of 74 percent to 21 percent, Americans (including 79 percent of moderates

and 62 percent of conservatives) say that they back the former First Lady's

call for more stem cell research flexibility.

 

 * The death of Ronald Reagan is boosting support for stem cell research.

When asked "would you be more or less likely to support stem cell research

if you knew that experts think it may hold the key to curing the Alzheimer's

disease that afflicted President Reagan," 72 percent of Americans said they

would be more likely to support stem cell research, including 76 percent of

moderates, 64 percent of conservatives and 62 percent of fundamentalist or

evangelical Christians.

 

 * Nancy Reagan's clout on stem cell research issues appears to be much

greater since the death of her husband.   The former first lady is seen as

very or somewhat credible on stem cell research issues by 80 percent of

Americans, including 77 percent of conservatives, 81 percent of moderates

and 74 percent of fundamentalist or evangelical Christians.  This reflects

an apparent uptick in the public's perception of her credibility on this

issue; a Civil Society Institute (CSI) survey asking the same question in

March 2004 in 18 key states found that only 65 percent of Americans

recognized Nancy Reagan as a credible spokesperson on stem cell research

issues.  Today, Nancy Reagan trails only major medical groups (88 percent)

in terms of being able to speak out with authority on stem cell research

issues.

 

 * Overall support for stem cell research is continuing its steady pattern

of growth.  When asked for their initial views with no prompting of medical

research that "uses stem cells from human embryos," Americans supported it

by a margin of 60 percent-26 percent.  This reflects major growth in support

from an earlier 2001 survey that asked the same question and found a support

level of 48-43 percent.

 

 * Support for stem cell research is rapidly approaching bipartisan status.

The initial question posed about "embryonic stem cell research" found strong

majority support among liberals (75 percent) and moderates (67 percent),

with conservatives (47 percent) hovering just under the majority level.

When the potential benefits of stem cell research were explained in a

separate question to those polled, the overall support level rose to 72

percent-23 percent, including backing from moderates at 81 percent and

conservatives at 60 percent.

 

 * Nearly three in four Americans support expanded federal support for stem

cell research.   A strong 74 percent of those polled expressed their backing

for more resources for stem cell research, including 80 percent of moderates

and 62 percent of conservatives.   Moderates lined up for additional stem

cell research by a margin of 80 percent-17 percent, while conservatives

supported the proposition by a margin of 62 percent-32 percent.

 

 * Nearly all Americans (95 percent) were aware of the fact that President

Ronald Reagan was afflicted with Alzheimer's disease prior to his death.

 

 Full survey findings are available online at

http://www.ResultsForAmerica.org.

 

 METHODOLOGY

 

 The RFA survey results are based upon telephone surveys conducted by

Opinion Research Corporation among a national probability sample of 1,017

adults 18 and older living in private households in the continental United

States.  The survey was conducted June 10-13, 2004, within days of the death

of former President Ronald Reagan.  The margin of error among all adults is

plus or minus 3 percentage points.

 

 ABOUT RESULTS FOR AMERICA

 

 Results For America (http://www.ResultsForAmerica.org) is a project of the

Civil Society Institute, which is based in Newton, Massachusetts.  The

mission of CSI is to serve as a catalyst for change by creating

problem-solving interactions among people, and between communities,

government and business, that can help to improve society.  You may visit

Civil Society Institute on the Web at http://www.CivilSocietyInstitute.org.

 

 RFA seeks to shape and tap the tremendous amount of community-level

knowledge, experience and innovative action that could solve America's

problems in four key areas, including:  "Healthy Families, Healthy Economy,

Healthy America."  It also supports a commitment to biomedical technologies

and breakthrough treatments and cures for life-threatening illnesses that

affect millions of us.

 

 CONTACT:  Christine Kraly, for Civil Society Institute/Results For

America, (703) 276-3258 or ckraly@hastingsgroup.com.

 

 

Reuters.com