News, 19 October 2000
Nurses are to provide the morning-after pill to women returning from
holidays at Manchester airport in England. John Denham, government
health minister, opened the airport's National Health Service drop-in
centre yesterday. It is one of 36 such centres due to open around the
country before the end of the month. [
Daily Express and
Daily Mail, 19
October]
The European Parliament will debate next week whether to remove the
monopoly on European Union funding for women's groups currently
enjoyed by the extreme pro-abortion European Women's Lobby. Last month
the parliament's committee on budgets narrowly agreed to recommend
funding for other women's groups, and the Coalition of Real Women in
Europe is asking European pro-life and pro-family groups to lobby
members of the parliament to support amendment number
912 on budget line A-3037 at the forthcoming plenary session. The
debate will begin next Wednesday (25 October), with voting scheduled
for 10 o'clock the next morning. [Coalition of Real Women in Europe,
19 October - contact
euromum2001@yahoo.com]
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia have
revealed that cells in human fat have been coaxed to grow into bone
cells. The news suggests that fat deposits could provide an abundant
source of adult stem cells which could be grown into a range of
different types of body tissue. Dr Louis P Bucky said that fat
deposits could provide "a potentially unlimited source of cells to
turn into mature cells of different types" unlike stem cells extracted
from adult bone marrow. [
Reuters Health, 18 October] This provides yet
more evidence of the potential of ethical alternatives to embryonic
stem cell research and so-called therapeutic cloning.
Police in Mexico have raided a clinic run by Marie Stopes
International following claims that abortions were being performed at
the centre. A doctor and a nurse, both of whom denied any wrongdoing,
were released after 10 hours. A spokesman for Marie Stopes
International, which is based in England, denied that any of its three
clinics in Mexico's Chiapas state had performed abortions. [The Boston
Globe, 18 October]
The highest constitutional court in Costa Rica has outlawed in vitro
fertilisation (IVF). The decision was made public last March, but the
court's reasons were published only last week. The judgement stated
that "the human embryo is a person from the moment of conception ...
not an object ... not to be frozen". Citing the fact that the IVF
procedure often entailed the death of embryos, the court ruled that it
was "not constitutionally legitimate" for human embryos "to be exposed
to disproportionate risk of death". When IVF was authorised in Costa
Rica by way of an executive decree in 1995, regulations prohibited the
creation of more than six embryos, all of whom had to be transferred
into the mother's womb. This prevented the massive level of 'wastage'
which results from IVF procedures in other countries, but nevertheless
only one out of six embryos in each case was generally expected to
survive. [
LifeSite Daily News, 18 October]
Recent comments by Al Gore, the Democrat candidate in next month's US
presidential elections, by which he tried to suggest that common
ground could be found between pro-abortionists and pro-lifers [see
digest for 17 October] have been criticised by a number of individuals
and groups. Mr Gore had signalled his willingness to sign a federal
partial-birth abortion ban as long as it included a 'health of the
mother' exception. However, it has been pointed out that such an
exception would effectively nullify any ban. Chris Smith, chairman of
the congressional pro-life caucus, said that the comments were "false,
misleading, cynical, highly deceptive and insulting", while a
statement released by the National Right to Life Committee described
Mr Gore's words as "brazenly misleading". [
Catholic News Service, 18
October; NRL press release, 18 October, from Pro-Life Infonet]
Doctors in the United States have claimed that the transplant
operation to save Molly Nash has been a success. Dr John Wagner of the
University of Minnesota said that the stem cells taken from the
umbilical cord of Adam, Molly's brother, had enabled her to start
producing her own bone marrow. [
Daily Telegraph, 19 October] Adam was
generated using in vitro fertilisation, and then selected using
pre-implantation genetic diagnosis to provide a suitable donor for
Molly. Her other siblings created at the same time, but who were not
considered appropriate, were discarded.
New research has suggested that unborn children whose mothers take
painkillers during labour are nearly five times more likely to become
addicted to drugs in later life. Dr Karin Nyberg, who led the research
team at Gothenburg University in Sweden, published the findings in
New
Scientist magazine. She suggested that exposure to high-dose
medication in the womb "may be an important and preventable risk
factor for later substance abuse in humans", although other experts
have treated her conclusion with scepticism. [
Metro, 19 October]
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