A British woman who had an abortion four years ago is suing the
National Health Service (NHS) for failing to warn her of the distress
she would later experience. The woman, who is from the north of England
but wishes to remain anonymous, suffered a serious breakdown when she
gave birth to a son three years later and realised what she had lost by
having the abortion. The woman, who used to work for the NHS, said that
she was never made aware of the possibility of an adverse psychological
reaction, even though patients are routinely warned of the possible
side-effects of other surgical procedures so that they can give their
informed consent. The legal action, which is still at the very early
stages, would be the first such case to come before a British court.
Nuala Scarisbrick of the Life charity praised the woman's courage and
claimed that women were deliberately not being told the whole truth
about abortion, including the possible link between the procedure and
breast cancer. [BBC News online, 12 June]
Five member states of the European Union have issued a declaration
asking for the inclusion of ethical guidelines in the sixth framework
programme setting out the EU's research budget for the next four years.
The statement by Germany, Ireland, Italy, Austria and Portugal asks
that the guidelines should cover in particular "the protection of human
dignity and human life in genomics and biotechnology research".
Luxembourg issued a separate statement to the same effect. At present
the sixth framework programme allows EU money to be spent on research
involving the destruction of human embryos, but the EU council of
ministers will meet on 18 June to discuss the matter further. France
and Spain are two countries which have yet to declare their position,
although the UK is known to be pushing for destructive research to be
included in the programme. [Euro-Fam and SPUC, 12 June]
A total of 16,400 unborn children were killed in registered abortions
in New Zealand last year, 300 or 1.9% more than in 2000. The figures,
released yesterday by Statistics New Zealand, also indicate that a
growing proportion of abortions are performed on women who have had a
previous abortion. One in three Asian women who became pregnant had an
abortion, compared to a national average of one in five. The overall
abortion rate for New Zealand in 2001 was 19.4 abortions per 1,000
women aged 15 to 44, compared to 17 per 1,000 in Britain. [New Zealand Herald, 12 June; digest for 24 May]
US President George W Bush has reaffirmed his pro-life views in an
address to the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC). Speaking via
satellite to the annual meeting of the SBC in St Louis yesterday,
President Bush said: "We believe in fostering a culture of life... We
believe that a life is a creation, not a commodity, and that our
children are gifts to be loved and protected, not products to be
designed and manufactured by human cloning." The US Senate is expected
to begin debating whether to ban human cloning on Friday. [SBC, 11 June; Pro-Life Infonet, 12 June]
Doctors in Texas have removed a benign tumour from the neck of a child
who was only partially born. A team of 24 doctors and nurses at the
Cook Children's Medical Center in Fort Worth removed the tumour once
the child's head and neck were exposed but while she was still
connected to the umbilical cord. After nearly four weeks in intensive
care, the girl, named Guadalupe, is now ready to go home. [CBS, 10 June]
This operation contrasts starkly with the practice of partial-birth
abortions in the US. President Bill Clinton twice vetoed federal laws
to ban partial birth abortions, and a ban on the procedure passed in
Nebraska was struck down by the US Supreme Court in June 2000 as
unconstitutional.
To subscribe to SPUC's email information services, please visit www.spuc.org.uk/em-signup. The reliability of the news herein is dependent on that of the cited sources, which are paraphrased rather than quoted. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the society. © Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, 2002