News, 18 July 2000
Nearly half of patients considered to be in a persistent vegetative
state (PVS) may in fact be aware of what is going on around them and
capable of communicating. A study carried out on 40 presumed PVS
patients by the Royal Hospital for Neurodisability in London has found
that 17 of them were misdiagnosed. Two thirds of those wrongly
diagnosed were thought to be in a PVS because their eyes did not follow
movement or failed to blink when threatened, but in fact this was
simply because they were blind. All those studied had very limited
movement, and so communication was difficult. Dr Keith Andrews,
director of medical and research services at the hospital, warned that
PVS patients "may spend a lifetime trapped in a damaged body, with poor
quality of life". There are between 1,000 and 1,500 presumed PVS
patients in Britain. Lorraine Lane, one such patient, was thought to be
in a PVS and her husband was applying to the courts for an order to end
her life until she squeezed his hand to prove some degree of awareness.
[Daily Mail, 18 July] Doctors in England have been able to withdraw
life-sustaining food and fluids from PVS patients since the case of
Tony Bland in 1993. This new study suggests that those killed may have
been aware of what was happening and could have recovered.
The Indian state of Madhya Pradesh has initiated a new population
stabilisation policy which includes penalties for families who have too
many children. From next year, families who have a third child will be
excluded from government welfare schemes and become ineligible to hold
elected offices or government jobs. Two prominent Hindu priests
responded by claiming that the policy arose out of "immorality and
unlimited lust" rather than any desire to limit population growth, and
condemned abortion as "a sin worse than murder". [CWNews, 17 July]
The US National Conference of Catholic Bishops has issued a letter
denying claims that Catholic Relief Services, their official charity,
supports the pro-abortion World March of Women 2000. Staff at CRS had
apparently confirmed their support for the march, the aims of which
included rights of access to abortion, yet the bishops were quick to
deny this, and Fr John Geaney, director of church affairs at CRS,
confirmed that CRS "does not, has not, and will not support the March
of Women." [CWNews, 17 July] The participation of Catholic groups in
the Canadian arm of the march has been a matter of controversy in that
country.
Former American president Gerald Ford has urged George W Bush to pick a
pro-abortion running mate. Joining the debate surrounding Bush's choice
of who will stand for vice-president on his ticket, Ford gave his
backing to Tom Ridge, the Catholic governor of Pennsylvania, whom he
described as "a responsible pro-choice candidate". Bush himself has
said that the most important quality required in a running mate is the
ability to take over as president should the need arise. [New York
Daily News Online, 17 July]
The United States Food and Drug Administration has embarked on a public
consultation process with regard to proposals to make the birth control
pill and the morning-after pill available over the counter without a
doctor's prescription. The public has been invited to submit written
comments during the process, which ends on 25 August. [About, The Human
Internet, 15 July]
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