Covid-19 Vaccine and The Abortion Issue
Covid-19 Vaccine and The Abortion Issue
Covid-19 Vaccine and The Abortion Issue
by Marie McCullough
If you get a vaccine developed with cells descended from cells taken decades
ago from an aborted fetus, are you condoning abortion?
If you are concerned, confused, or just curious about the link between the
coronavirus vaccines and abortion, here is an overview.
After a British doctor proved that infecting humans with the relatively mild cowpox
virus gave them immunity against deadly smallpox, industrialized “vaccine farms” were
set up to harvest cowpox virus from calves in the late 1800s.
In the United States in the mid-1960s, for example, about 31,000 pregnant
women infected with the rubella (German measles) virus suffered stillbirths, gave birth
to severely disabled infants, or decided to end their pregnancies. One aborted fetus was
sent to Philadelphia’s Wistar Institute, where vaccine pioneer Stanley Plotkin isolated
the rubella virus from kidney tissue. He developed the vaccine that is given today by
growing the virus in a cell line made from the lungs of an uninfected fetus aborted in
Sweden.
The three COVID-19 vaccines now approved in the United States all used
historically derived fetal cell lines in parts of the development process. Pfizer and
Moderna used the cells only to test their vaccine, while J&J used the cells for research,
production, and testing, according to the antiabortion Lozier Institute.
Most, but not all, antiabortion ethicists and organizations say the horrors of the
pandemic outweigh their qualms about “abortion-tainted” vaccines.
However, most of them also advise that if there is a choice, get what they consider the
more “morally acceptable” shot.
Historical fetal cell lines were derived in the 1960’s and 1970’s from two elective
abortions that have been used to create vaccines for diseases such as hepatitis A,
rubella, and rabies. Abortions from which fetal cells were obtained were elective and
were not done for the purpose of vaccine development. The fetal cell lines being used to
produce some of the potential COVID-19 vaccines are from two sources:
● HEK-293: A kidney cell line that was isolated from a fetus in 1973 (undisclosed origin,
from either a spontaneous miscarriage or an elective abortion)
● PER.C6: A retinal cell line that was isolated from an aborted fetus in 1985 Any
vaccine that relies on these historic cell lines will not require nor solicit new abortions.
Were the Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines developed using fetal cell
lines?
The mRNA COVID-19 vaccines produced by Pfizer and Moderna do not require
the use of any fetal cell cultures in order to manufacture (produce) the vaccine. Early in
the development of mRNA vaccine technology, fetal cells were used for “proof of
concept” (to demonstrate how a cell could take up mRNA and produce the SARS-CoV-2
spike protein) or to characterize the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein… However, such a cell
line was used to test the efficacy of both vaccines.
The non-replicating viral vector vaccine produced by Johnson & Johnson did
require the use of fetal cell cultures, specifically PER.C6, in order to produce and
manufacture the vaccine.
Sources:
https://www.inquirer.com/health/coronavirus/covid-19-vaccine-and-anti-abortion-ethical-
qualms-20210305.html
https://www.health.nd.gov/sites/www/files/documents/COVID%20Vaccine
%20Page/COVID-19_Vaccine_Fetal_Cell_Handout.pdf