News, 17 November 2000
Patricia and Peter Thompson yesterday won their case against the
Sheffield Fertility Centre after the High Court agreed that the clinic
had breached it contract with the couple by implanting three embryos
in Mrs Thompson instead of two. She refused to have an abortion and
gave birth to three healthy babies, but sought compensation equivalent
to the costs of bringing up the third child. As reported in yesterday's
digest, it was revealed during the hearing that Mrs Thompson was the
only one of 254 patients who actually gave birth to triplets as a
result of having three embryos implanted. Paul Tully, general
secretary of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children,
pointed out that "in many of the other cases, one of the implanted
embryos was presumably selected for abortion", a fact which
demonstrates "the disturbing commodification of human life which
characterises
in vitro fertilisation treatment in Britain today". [
BBC
News online and
SPUC media release, 16 November]
A study carried out by researchers at Erasmus University in Rotterdam,
Holland, has shown that most people would not choose to abort babies
found, by pre-implantation genetic diagnosis, to be carrying
genes which would lead to disease in later life. Of those surveyed
who themselves carried two genes which increased the
chances of developing breast cancer, none found selective abortion
acceptable. Of those surveyed who did not carry the gene, only a small
minority (10 to 14 percent) considered abortion acceptable. [
Reuters
Health, via Yahoo! News, 16 November]
In the United States, the supreme court of Alaska has heard arguments
this week in an appeal against a lower court's decision to uphold the
state's ban on assisted suicides. The Compassion in Dying Federation
has argued that citizens have the right to die with dignity, but Eric
Johnson, assistant attorney general, stressed that a terminally ill
adult might be coerced by various factors into opting for suicide when
adequate pain relief was almost always available and in many cases
patients had a substantial amount of time left to live. The Catholic
Church in Alaska submitted its own brief in support of the state law,
urging the court not to "constitutionalize private killing".
[
Anchorage Daily News, 15 November, from Pro-Life Infonet]
The president of the Population Research Institute in New York has
criticised the United Nations for its "anti-people bias". Steven W
Mosher said: "The UN speaks of peace and security, yet through its
population control programmes is carrying out a true war against
unborn children. This is not a conventional war with soldiers and
tanks manoeuvring on a field. But it involves a deliberate effort to
kill, and there have been far more casualties from abortion than from
all the other wars in the past century combined. Is it not
schizophrenic for the UN to preach about disarmament, while at the
same time distributing manual vacuum aspirators [used for abortions]
and morning-after pills to assault the unborn
in utero?" [
LifeSite
Daily News, 16 November]
At a press conference held in New York, a group of medical experts
have pushed for the reclassification of the morning-after-pill so that
it could become freely available in drugstores and supermarkets. Dr
Carolyn Westhoff, professor of obstetrics, gynaecology and public
health at the Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center, said: "There are
no risks ... we've got plenty of studies now showing that these
products are just safe, safe, safe." Dr Westhoff admitted that she
gave all her patients undated prescriptions for the [abortifacient]
drug, whether they had asked for it or not, so that they could keep it
in a drawer for possible future use. [
Reuters Health, via Yahoo! News,
16 November] The SPUC briefing on the morning-after pill can
be viewed at
http://www.spuc.org.uk/map/briefing.htm. In addition,
information on the dangers, deceptions and drawbacks of the
morning-after pill can be viewed at
http://www.spuc.org.uk/map/dangers.htm.
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