News, 24 February 2000
People undergoing voluntary euthanasia stand a one-in-four chance of
having a distressing experience, according to a Dutch survey. Doctors
often have to administer [further] drugs to hasten death. Patients can
wake from induced comas and suffer from vomiting and fits. Alert, the
British anti-euthanasia group, said that, unless death is approaching
naturally, the body fights attempts to kill it. [The Times, 24
February, 2000]
A young woman has chosen to stay alive, despite severe brain damage and
having previously expressed the wish to die if she were badly
incapacitated. Mr Tom McMillan, a neuropsychologist at Glasgow
university, was able to communicate with "Miss X" after she had been in
a car-accident, and she indicated her wish to live. Doctors had applied
to the courts for permission to stop feeding her. [Sarah Boseley,
British journalist, quoted on the Conservative Christian Fellowship
website]
27 people took advantage of Oregon's assisted suicide law last year, 11
more than the year before. Oregon is the only part of the USA with such
a law. [Pro-Life Infonet, 24 February, 2000]
Human stem-cell research, using cells from embryos and foetal tissue
and funded by the US National Institutes of Health, could begin towards
the middle of this year. A public consultation on the matter has just
ended and thousands of comments were received. Some members of Congress
have threatened to block funding for such research. [Pro-Life Infonet,
24 February, 2000]
The vice-president of the Pontifical Academy for Life has likened the
patenting of human genes to slavery. Bishop Elio Sgreccia said that
such patenting was the logical step after the Warnock committee's
sanctioning of human embryo research, and predictions about human
cloning which followed the production of a cloned sheep. [Zenit, 23
February, 2000]
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