News, 28 June 2000
Doctors at the British Medical Association's annual conference have
referred to their medical ethics committee the proposal to require the
written consent of patients before a decision is made not to
resuscitate them. Dr Alex Freeman, a general practitioner from
Southampton, told the conference that it was unacceptable for doctors
to make do-not-resuscitate orders for patients with whom they were not
familiar. She said: "All too often these decisions are made by junior
doctors at the request of nurses and sometimes in the middle of busy
ward rounds. It is difficult to have discussions with patients about
resuscitation but this is no reason why discussions should not take
place." [BBC News Online, 27 June & The Independent, 28 June] In
addition, the conference rejected a motion criticising the BMA's
guidance on the withdrawal of food and fluids from patients with severe
stroke or dementia. It also welcomed the findings of a recent meeting
which concluded against the idea of physician-assisted suicide, but
then rejected a motion which would have incorporated this conclusion
into official BMA policy. [Medical Ethics Alliance]
One in 80 children (1.2 percent) born in Britain in 1997 was the result
of in vitro fertilisation treatment, and in Denmark it was as many as
one in 38 (2.6 percent). Across Europe, an average of 22 percent of
treatment cycles resulted in a live birth, compared with 26 percent in
America. American doctors usually transfer more embryos and instances
of multiple births are higher. These findings were presented by Dr Karl
Nygren of the Sofia Hospital in Sweden to the European Society of Human
Reproduction and Embryology in Bologna. [Daily Telegraph, 28 June]
[Behind the statistics relating to the proportion of live births to IVF
treatment cycles lies the fact that a large number of unborn children
are generated and then perish as part of the procedure.]
A British academic has voiced concerns that the decoding of the human
genome could lead to more abortions. Dr Tom Shakespeare, director of
the Policy, Ethics and Life Sciences Research Institute at Newcastle
University, was himself born with achondroplasia, a genetic abnormality
which restricts growth. His father had the same condition, as do his
two children. Dr Shakespeare asked: "Will we shift towards a brave new
world of 'tentative pregnancies', where women will wait to check their
developing embryos for a range of genetic diseases before deciding to
press ahead with birth? ... It is urgent we debate this issue now and
decide where the limits on such interventions be set." [Daily Mail, 28
June]
A committee of the US House of Representatives has rejected a proposal
to allow federal funding for international organisations which promote
abortion. The House Appropriations Committee voted against the
amendment by 34 to 26. The bar on US aid to non-governmental
organisations which use their own money to lobby in favour of abortion
has held up payment of almost 1 billion US dollars to the United
Nations. The proposal did not challenge the separate ban on US aid for
organisations which actually perform abortions. [Las Vegas Sun, 27 June]
The number of doctors in Winnipeg, Canada, who are willing to perform
abortions has halved from 22 to 11 since 1997. Despite this, the number
of abortions performed each year in Manitoba province has remained
steady at about 3,000. It has been claimed that doctors have been
withdrawing from the official list of abortionists after an abortion
doctor was shot in the shoulder in November 1997, but Rachel Murray of
League for Life in Manitoba said: "I don't think it has anything to do
with the shooting. I think it's a combination of a greater medical
knowledge regarding the humanity of the pre-born child and the basic
moral repugnance of the act." [Winnipeg Sun, 26 June; from Pro-Life
E-News]
The long-awaited decision by the US Supreme Court on Nebraska's partial
birth abortion ban is expected today (28 June). The case, Carhart vs
Stenberg, centres on the Nebraska law passed in 1997 (but not yet
enacted) which prohibits partial birth abortions except to save the
life of the mother. One in 1,800 abortions performed in the United
States are thought to be done this way (technically known as dilation
and extraction) and so far it has been banned in 31 states. President
Clinton has twice vetoed federal bans on the procedure. This is the
first major abortion case considered by the Supreme Court since it
reaffirmed Roe vs Wade by five votes to four in 1992. [Boston Herald
& Lincoln Journal Star, both 28 June]
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