News, 27 January 2000
The Society for the Protection of Unborn Children has defended a
parliamentary Bill which would tighten the law against euthanasia.
Speaking on ITN's Powerhouse programme today, Paul Tully, general
secretary, emphasised that the Medical Treatment (Prevention of
Euthanasia) Bill, which will be debated in the House of Commons
tomorrow, would not compel doctors to give futile treatment. He said
that elderly people were scared at the prospect of being killed while
receiving medical treatment. Dr Peter Brand, also on the programme,
complained that the Bill would require him to treat old people with
terminal conditions. Writing in today's Daily Telegraph, Mrs Ann
Winterton, sponsor of the Bill, states that her proposed law would not
stop doctors from giving adequate palliative care, even if such care
shortened lives.
An expert on fertility has said that genetically modified humans are
inevitable. Lord Winston, professor of obstetrics and gynaecology at
Hammersmith Hospital, London, told the Royal Society that cloning was
"relatively unimportant in terms of the threat that it poses to our
understanding of what it is like to be human". He warned that not
enough was known about the human genetic make-up to predict, for
example, the effect on future generations of altering an individual's
IQ genes. Lord Winston objected to the British government's
recently-imposed ban on the cloning of early embryos for the production
of tissue for medical treatment. [Roger Highfield, Daily Telegraph
website, 27 January, 2000]
Scientists who have worked on the Dolly-the-sheep project claim that
they can create an unlimited number of human clones without sacrificing
a human embryo in each case. The technique, which uses an embryo's
stem-cells, is said to help in growing organs and tissue. [The
Independent, 27 January, 2000]
Even the occasional glass of wine drunk by an expectant mother can
damage her unborn baby's brain and central nervous system, according to
Ms Jennifer Little, research fellow at Belfast University. Around two
thirds of British women drink during pregnancy. The Royal College of
Obstetricians and Gynaecologists recommend a maximum of seven units per
week and the Midwives' Association say that drinking 10 units a week is
safe. [Daily Mail, Daily Record and The Guardian, 27 January, 2000]
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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, 2012