News, 25 January 2000
British fertility clinics have won their battle to be allowed to use
frozen eggs in in vitro fertilisation. The Assisted Reproduction and
Gynaecology Centre, London, has been granted a licence by the Human
Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA). The HFEA, which had
thought that freezing eggs was risky, says that it was persuaded by new
research. Freezing eggs for subsequent IVF is mainly done when a woman
is about to have cancer-treatment which threatens fertility.
[http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/health/newsid_618000/618236.stm]
Mr George W Bush is said to be limiting his exposure to the press after
being put under pressure over abortion. The issue dominated the contest
for the Republican nomination in Iowa and could re-emerge elsewhere.
President Clinton has said that the future of abortion would be decided
at the next election, since his successor could appoint new supreme
court judges. [The Times, 25 January, 2000]
A British woman is using state legal funding to sue a
condom-manufacturer for 120,000 pounds after the contraceptive
allegedly failed. Mrs Marian Richardson, a beauty-consultant, has a
four-year-old daughter and is claiming for, among other things, the
cost of a larger car, loss of income, and compensation for damage to
her relationship with her boyfriend. LRC Products, the manufacturer,
prints a warning on its products to the effect that no contraception is
100% reliable. The company says that Mrs Richardson could have taken a
morning-after pill after discovering the alleged fault in their
product. [BBC website, 24 January 2000]
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