News, 29 May 2001
The Women on the Waves Foundation has announced that its floating
abortion clinic will go to Dublin in June. Dr Rebecca Gomperts, the
Dutch abortionist behind the project, explained that the facility
could provide abortions under Dutch law as long as it remained in
international waters more than 12 miles off the Irish coast. John
Smyth, a spokesman for the Irish pro-life campaign, said that his
movement would be considering legal action but would not picket the
boat since this would only generate further publicity. [
Sunday Times,
27 May;
Irish News, 28 May]
A British charity has claimed that many carers of mentally ill people
have been tempted by euthanasia. Gary Hogman, head of policy and
campaigns at the National Schizophrenia Fellowship, claimed that, at
every carers' group he had attended over 12 years, at least one person
had admitted to having considered helping someone to die. Mr Hogman
said that carers should be provided with greater information on their
entitlements, training opportunities and options to ease their stress.
[
BBC News online, 27 May]
A hospital in Essex, England, has been pioneering a screening
technique aimed at identifying unborn babies with Down's syndrome. The
programme at Harold Wood hospital in Romford is currently being
appraised by the economic and social research council. Over the past
three years, 13,000 women have undergone a new form of screening at
the hospital which involves the extraction of cells from the placenta
rather than from the amniotic fluid surrounding the child. The
technique offers women the chance to abort babies with Down's syndrome
within the first 12 weeks of pregnancy, two months earlier than is
possible with conventional screening. The technique is also said to be
more reliable. About 50 unborn children with the condition have so far
been identified at the hospital, all of whom were aborted after their
mothers received counselling. [
The Guardian, 28 May] This screening
technique appears to be like chorionic villus sampling (CVS). Previous
trials have indicated that the risk of unintended miscarriage is about
twice as high with CVS as with amniocentesis.
A 56-year-old British woman has given birth to twins by Caesarean
section following in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment. Lynn Bezant
said she had no regrets after non-identical twins David and Susan were
delivered at Horton general hospital in Banbury, Oxfordshire. Mrs
Bezant already has three adult children but wanted a larger family and
started the IVF process at the age of 52. The lady whose donated eggs
were used by Mrs Bezant to conceive said that she felt "angry and
betrayed". Miss Melanie Armstrong revealed that she had gone through a
series of difficult extraction operations to help young, childless
couples. [
BBC News online, 26 May;
Daily Mail, 28 May] Most new human
beings generated during IVF treatment die in the process. One expert
has claimed that only 1.7 percent of IVF conceptions actually result
in a live birth. [Dr E L Billings, India, August 1999]
A developmental paediatrician in South Africa has claimed that foetal
alcohol syndrome (FAS) is so widespread that it is having an impact on
the country's crime rate. Dr Colleen Adnams believes that FAS affects
over 5 percent of all South African children. FAS is caused when a
woman drinks excessive amounts of alcohol during pregnancy, disrupting
the development of her unborn child. Children with FAS may suffer
learning or social problems as well as stunted growth and impairment
of sight and speech. South Africa's Western Cape province is said to
have the highest incidence of FAS in the world. [
BBC News online, 27
May]
A medical centre in the United States which mishandled the cremation
of an unborn child has been ordered to pay 120,000 dollars in
compensation to the child's mother. Debra Atnip had her unborn son
aborted at 19 weeks' gestation in 1994 after tests revealed that he
had spina bifida. The jury in Tennessee found that the hospital had
acted negligently by delaying the child's cremation for seven months
and then failing to return the ashes to his mother until more than a
year had elapsed after the abortion. [
The Tennessean, 26 May]
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