News, 19 April 2001
The British health secretary will announce today that the UK is to
become the first country in the world explicitly to ban the birth of
cloned babies [see
last Tuesday's digest]. However, media reports have
presented the move as a prohibition of human cloning when this is not
the case. The new legislation would prohibit the introduction of
cloned human embryos into wombs of women, thus outlawing the use of
cloning technology for reproductive purposes, but the creation of
human clones for the purposes of destructive experimentation and the
extraction of stem cells would still be allowed. [
BBC News online,
Independent, Reuters and SPUC, 19 April]
Scientists in the USA have said that damaged spinal cords might be
repaired by the stretching of nerve cells. A team at the University of
Pennsylvania in Philadelphia are testing a technique which involves
gently stretching the axons, or central linking fibres, between nerve
cells in the laboratory over a long period of time. They hope that
such a technique could enable the gap between damaged nerves to be
bridged. [
BBC News online, 18 April] This is yet another line of
research which indicates the potential of ethical alternatives to
destructive embryonic stem cell research and so-called therapeutic
cloning--see the first item of yesterday's digest, for example.
Statistics in a new study have indicated that women who have abortions
are considerably more likely to commit suicide than women who carry
their unborn child to term. Dr David Reardon and others studied the
medical records and death certificates of more than 173,000 women in
California and discovered that the average annual suicide rate for
women who had obtained abortions was 7.8 per 100,000. This compared to
an average national rate of 5.2 per 100,000 among all women aged 15 to
44, and a rate of just 3.0 per 100,000 among women who had delivered
babies. [
LifeSite, 18 April] A study published last year indicated
that women who had obtained abortions were also more likely to turn to
drug abuse or die in accidents--see
news digest for 13 June 2000.
A 60-year-old man in England is suing doctors for placing a "do not
resuscitate" (DNR) order on him in hospital. Chris Gardner discovered
the DNR order in his medical notes while staying as a patient in
Dorset County Hospital in Dorchester. He contracted an infection in
hospital which necessitated the amputation of his legs, and then found
the DNR order on Christmas Eve 1999. Mr Gardner is planning to pursue
his legal action under the right to life clause of the 1998 Human
Rights Act. [
The Times, 19 April]
The Canadian government has announced a grant of 982,000 Canadian
dollars [439,360 British pounds] for the work of the pro-abortion
Planned Parenthood Federation of Canada in central and south America.
Maria Minna, Canada's minister for international co-operation, said
that the funds would be used to promote "sexual and reproductive
health" [a euphemism for access to abortion and abortifacient methods
of birth control] among the young people of Brazil, Colombia, El
Salvador and Jamaica. [
LifeSite, 18 April]
The South African government has reportedly shelved consideration of a
bill to legalise euthanasia. The South African Law Commission proposed
options related to euthanasia in 1999, but an adviser to the health
minister has confirmed that the recommendations will not be considered
by parliament this year. [
South African Daily Mail and
Guardian, 17
April]
The leader of the Roman Catholic Church in The Gambia used his Easter
homily to condemn abortion and euthanasia. Bishop Michael J Cleary of
Banjul described Jesus's resurrection as God's "uprising against death" and said: "...let us vigorously reaffirm the value of human
life and its inviolability. Let us appeal to each and every person, in
the name of God, to respect, protect, love and serve life, every human
life." [
LifeSite, 18 April]
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