News, 19 January 2000
The British parliamentary motion which warns about the morning-after
pill has had an amendment proposed which claims that "emergency
contraception" is not a method of abortion. Dr Jenny Tonge MP's
amendment condones the supply of so-called "emergency contraception" by
pharmacists and claims that 50 pharmacists have asked to join a trial
scheme being conducted among 16 of their colleagues in the north-west
of England. [840, Notices of Motions number 28, House of Commons, 18
January, 2000]
Doctors are expected to ask the British government to introduce new
rules on in vitro fertilisation (IVF) in the hope of reducing the
number of triplets born to IVF patients. The Royal College of
Obstetricians and Gynaecologists may recommend that no more than two
embryos can be replaced in a woman's womb. Multiple births can be
accompanied by defects such as cerebral palsy and spina bifida.
Professor Ian Craft of the London Fertility Centre is quoted as saying
that such a new regulation would hit older women and the less fertile.
[The Independent and The Guardian, 19 January, 2000]
A 57-year-old grandmother (probably in Britain) is to be given IVF
treatment so that she can have her seventh baby by her fifth husband
using eggs from her 36-year-old niece. [Daily Mail, 19 January, 2000]
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