News, 8 February 2000
The composition of the House of Commons committee to scrutinise the
Medical Treatment (Prevention of Euthanasia) Bill has been announced,
and most of the MPs on it are thought to be in favour of the proposed
legislation. It does, however, include Ms Yvette Cooper, the public
health minister, who spoke against the Bill during its second reading
on the 28th of last month. The committee's first meeting will be
tomorrow at 16:30. [based on House of Commons website]
A British health minister has told parliament that the government has
no plans to legislate on advance statements (so-called living wills)
"at the present time". Lord Hunt of Kings Heath was quoting from Making
Decisions, the lord chancellor's policy-statement on mentally
incapacitated adults, as part of a reply to Baroness Miller of Hendon.
[House of Lords website, 3 February 2000]
A man has accused his girlfriend of stealing his frozen sperm from the
Harley Street fertility centre, London, and using it to conceive a
baby. Mr Michael von Schonburg is claiming damages for breach of
contract and duty, distress, indignation and anxiety, as well as
seeking indemnity against a claim of paternity. The centre is fighting
the claim, saying that Mr von Schonburg signed a consent-form. [The
Mirror, 8 February, 2000]
A news-digest recipient with family-experience of thalassaemia (see
Friday's news-digest) writes that the illness has a major and a minor
type. "Only the major type is possibly life-threatening. The minor type
has very little effect on health, especially if treated with folic
acid. The facts are much less frightening than the rumour. Too many
health professionals give too little information on the reality of the
condition and what can be done to alleviate its bad effects. Mothers
are left to imagine and fear the worst."
Rev Bernard O'Connor of Dundee, Scotland, writes in today's
Independent: "I challenge the assumption that abortion is the easiest
and best option for a 12-year-old girl. Abortion undoubtedly erases the
'problem' from our sight, but does nothing about the real issue here:
that a 12-year-old girl becomes pregnant by a 15-year-old boy, and the
attitudes in society that condone, even encourage, such a situation." A
12-year-old girl is said to have given birth in south-west England
recently. She is said to have been supported by Cardinal Winning's
organisation.
Surrogacy will be the subject of a BBC1 television-programme to be broadcast at 21:30 tomorrow.
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