News, 6 July 2001
Warnings about prenatal sex-selection from the UK embryology authority
have been decried by SPUC. Paul Tully, SPUC general secretary, said:
"The HFEA's warnings about gender-selection and designer babies have a
hollow ring to them. The authority already allows pre-implantation
genetic diagnosis for disability. All such diagnosis is discriminatory
because it results in the destruction of human life for one reason or
another. Even if young embryos aren't discarded because of their
gender, they can still be discarded because of a suspected
developmental anomaly. This sends a horrific message to disabled
members of our supposedly caring society." [
SPUC media release, 6 July]
British health authorities could compete in terms of the number of
patients from whom they withdrew food and fluid, a doctor has told the
Medical Ethics Alliance. Dr Greg Gardner was warning of the possible
consequences of the implementation of a new version of British Medical
Association guidance on life-prolonging treatment, which suggests that
information about euthanasia by dehydration and starvation should be
submitted to health ministers. [
Catholic Herald, 6 July]
A male nurse has admitted killing nine women who had Alzheimer's
disease at a Swiss home for the elderly. Lucerne police are trying to
find out how the women were killed and whether there were similar
incidents in places where the unidentified man worked before. The
director of the city's social services has described the deaths as
incomprehensible. [AP on
Yahoo!, 5 July]
Unborn children in America could be defined as people under proposed
changes to eligibility to health insurance. Mr Tommy Thompson, the
health secretary, wants foetuses to be classified as low-income
children and thus qualify for help with pre-natal care and delivery.
Opponents fear this could establish a principle which would undermine
legal abortion. [
Star Tribune, 6 July]
The leader of the majority in the US House of Representatives has been
joined by two Republican colleagues in urging President Bush to
prohibit federal funding for embryo research. Representatives Armey,
Delay and Watts said: "The federal government cannot morally look the
other way with respect to the destruction of human embryos, then accept
and pay for extracted stem cells for the purpose of medical research."
[
CNN, 3 July]
Multiple births, which can be premature and need treatment, have
increased in England and Wales. Fertility treatments and older mothers
mean that, while the chance of having twins 10 years ago was one in 50,
one child in 37 is now born a twin. [
BBC, 5 July]
A new prenatal scanner offers detailed, multi-dimensional images of
unborn babies as early as seven weeks' into gestation. The Voluson 730
can detect cleft palates and Down's syndrome. Advocates of the
scanner's use describe how seeing detailed pictures of unborn children
helped the mother of a child with a cleft palate bond with the child
and discuss post-natal surgery. Another mother claimed that seeing her
child persuaded her to give up smoking. [
BBC, 5 July]
Manufacturers of scanners cannot ensure that their equipment may not be
used to detect conditions in children who are subsequently aborted.
The Catholic bishops of Belgium have described euthanasia as
morally unacceptable, as the county's senate debates its legalisation.
The bishops warn of social pressure on the weakest. [
Zenit, 5 July]
Defects in cloned animals suggest that human cloning will be unsafe,
though Clonaid, an American company, claims it is near to cloning a
person. US researchers found that cloned mice had genetic anomalies.
Professor Ian Wilmut, who cloned a sheep, warned that human cloning
would result in abortion and in children who lived for only a short
time and/or whose development was unconventional. [
BBC, 6 July]
Caesarian sections make subsequent conventional births more dangerous, according to the
New England Journal of Medicine. In such cases, the likelihood of rupture of the uterus is increased and prostaglandins further increase the danger.
[
The Times, 6 July]
Epidural anaesthetic could be risky for mothers and babies, increasing
the likelihood of forceps deliveries. Researchers at St Thomas'
hospital, London, advocate lower epidural doses, though babies
delivered with such anaesthesia take longer to become vigorous and are
more likely to need help with breathing. [
BBC, 5 July]
The German Social Democrat/Green government will not accede to a
request from the Christian Democrat opposition to ban imports of human
embryonic cells. The law forbids the creation of embryos for research
but does not forbid imports. [
CNN, 3 July]
The French constitutional council has over-ruled the Polynesian
government's objections to the extension of France's abortion law to
the islands. [
Radio Australia News, 5 July]
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, 2013