News, 7 March 2000
Nearly one third of women in Britain who get pregnant continue to drink
during pregnancy, while one third of their partners smoke during the
pregnancy, according to a poll of 2,000 women. It has been suggested,
in the light of the Fit for Pregnancy survey, that nearly three
quarters of British couples are "unfit to have a baby". [yesterday's
Express] A survey for Pregnancy and Birth magazine suggests that almost
half of all children are conceived while their parents have drunk at
least as much alcohol as would make it illegal for them to drive.
[yesterday's Guardian]
The British Medical Association (BMA) has decided, after a two-day
consultative conference, not to ask for a change in the law to allow
doctors to help their patients commit suicide. [yesterday's Herald] The
association also wants morning-after pills to be available free of
charge from pharmacies. The BMA says that pharmacists should be trained
to dispense such pills and must provide a private consultation-area on
their premises. [BMA press release, 28 February 2000]
A computer-driven machine for committing suicide is to go on display at
London's Science Museum. The museum paid Dr Philip Nitschke 1,000
pounds for the equipment, which has been used to give lethal injections
to four terminally ill people when euthanasia was briefly legal in
Australia's Northern Territory a few years ago. The museum says it is
consulting anti-euthanasia groups on the matter. [The Independent
website, today]
UK health ministry figures suggest that teenage girls are using
contraceptive and quasi-contraceptive pills less because they fear the
side-effects. Brook Advisory Clinics say that use of the pill has
halved in the past decade. A Brook spokeswoman said that girls who
refused the contraceptive pill would nevertheless request morning-after
pills, which contain large doses of hormones similar to those in
contraceptive pills. [BBC website, Friday]
Hospitals in Scotland are said to be refusing to abort babies of more
than 12 weeks' gestation. Scottish women are said to be travelling to
England for terminations. The British Pregnancy Advisory Service plans
to open a private abortion-clinic in Scotland charging 400 pounds per
termination. [BBC website reported in Saturday's Pro-Life E-News]
Mothers in Hamburg, Germany, who do not want their newborn babies can
put them through a type of letterbox such that they land on a heated
bed and are then looked after. Last year five children in the city died
through being abandoned. The scheme has been criticised for encouraging
the notion of disposable babies. [today's Mirror and Times]
The Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination has agreed that
there should be a full hearing on whether a Catholic teacher can refuse
to pay his union fees because he believes such payments support
abortion. Mr Gerard O'Brien was allegedly suspended for five days for
not paying all or some of his dues. He is reported as claiming that
organisations such as the National Education Association, to which his
union is affiliated, backs abortion. [Associated Press quoted in
Saturday's Pro-Life E-News]
John Smeaton, national director of the Society for the Protection of
Unborn Children will address a pro-life congress in Granada, Spain,
early next month. Other speakers will include Cardinal Alfonso Lopez
Trujillo, president of the Pontifical Council for the Family, which is
organising the congress from the seventh to the ninth of next month. Mr
Smeaton will talk about pro-life movements and their relationship with
the international defence of vulnerable life. [Zenit, Friday]
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