Official abortion figures for England and Wales show the number of
abortions funded by the state last year was the highest ever at
134,705. 186,274 abortions were recorded and 176,364 were performed on
residents. The figures exclude 'hidden abortions' by so-called
emergency contraception, but still show the third highest total ever
for registered abortions in England and Wales. The figures show the
second highest annual total for abortions on residents. 9,910
abortions were performed on non-resident women. Over 75% of abortions
are on single women. [Office of National Statistics] Paul Tully, SPUC
general secretary, commented: "These figures demonstrate the
efficiency of the systematic attack on human life initiated 35 years
ago by the 1967 Abortion Act. Each human life is infinitely precious
yet the government has taken no effective action to tackle this loss
of life on a vast scale." [SPUC, 30 September]
SPUC has applauded the US administration for declaring that pregnant
women and their unborn children are eligible to receive state health
insurance. SPUC general secretary Paul Tully commented: "From the
moment of his or her conception, an unborn child is a fully human and
equally deserving of access to health and social care, and insurance
and benefit systems must recognise this. Pregnant women, too, need all
the protection society can afford, because we know that women in
pregnancy are particularly vulnerable." Mr. Tully also called on the
British government to make pregnant women eligible to receive child
benefit. [SPUC, 30 September; US Department of Health
and Human Services, 27 September]
A Scottish island is exporting seaweed for manufacture as a product
for use in cervix dilation prior to abortion procedures. A business on
the island of South Uist exports the seaweed to Scandanavia, where
Laminaria is formed in matchstick-sized pieces which swell once placed
inside a woman's cervix, thereby making access to an unborn child
easier prior to an abortion, especially late-term abortions. Laminaria
can also be used to assist the fitting of abortifacient intrauterine
devices (IUDs) and the drainage of the uterine cavity. A South Uist
local councillor David Blaney said: "I'm unhappy to hear some of the
product is being used for abortions." [Scotland on Sunday, 29
September]
A study of pregnant British women has found that most women continue
to smoke despite receiving anti-smoking leaflets explaining the
harmful effects of smoking on unborn children. The department of
obstetrics & gynaecology at London's Whittington Hospital surveyed 63
pregnant smokers and 117 pregnant non-smokers and found that only four
of the women surveyed quit smoking, only seven reduced their smoking
and three women took up smoking. According to official estimates,
almost one-third of pregnant women in England smoke during their
pregnancies. [Reuters Health via Kaiser Daily Reproductive Health
Report, 27 September]
Thousands of women may have been affected while in the womb by a
potentially cancer-causing drug. A study by the US National Cancer
Institute of 5,000 women known to have been exposed in the womb to
deithylstillboestrol (DES) found that these women had an increased
breast cancer risk of 40%, rising to 250% for women aged over 40. The
drug, a synthetic form of the female hormone oestrogen used to cut the
risk of miscarriage, was withdrawn in 1975 due to safety concerns.
[BBC, 30 September]
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