News, 1 November 2001
Mrs Dianne Pretty, whose bid to be given a right to die was rejected
by the English high court last month, has been given permission to
take her case to the House of Lords. The high court had refused Mrs
Pretty leave to appeal, but the appellate committee of the House of
Lords, England's highest court, agreed today to hear her case anyway.
A coalition of British pro-life groups, including SPUC, will seek to
intervene in the appeal. Paul Tully, general secretary of SPUC, said:
"Those backing Mrs Pretty are determined to undermine the right to
life of severely disabled people in order to promote the cause of
medical killing. It is vital that this case is seen in the wider
context of the pressures which might be brought to bear on handicapped
people to opt for death." [
SPUC, 1 November]
American women who take the Accutane drug to counter acne will now be
required to take a pregnancy test every month under new rules
announced yesterday. Accutane has been shown to be highly effective in
the treatment of severe acne, but it can also cause unborn children to
die or develop severe birth defects. Of the 2,181 women known to have
become pregnant while taking the drug between 1982 and June 2001, the
US Food and Drug Administration reports that 1,310 had elective
abortions. Only 192 unaffected babies were born, while 166 were born
with congenital anomalies and 242 were miscarried. [
Reuters, via
Yahoo! news, 31 October]
President Alfonso Portillo of Guatemala last week signed into law his
country's first reproductive health policy. The Catholic Church had
urged the president to veto the Social Development and Population Law
on the basis that it could be manipulated to promote abortion. The law
will allow state funds to be used to provide contraceptives [some of
which may be potentially abortifacient]. Abortion is illegal in
Guatemala. [
Christian Science Monitor, via Northern Light, 25 October]
Researchers on the Greek island of Crete claim to have discovered a
fundamental mechanism that controls the implantation of a newly
conceived embryo in his or her mother's womb. Scientists at the
University of Crete have reported that the presence or absence of a
specific hormone determines whether an embryo will successfully
implant and survive until birth. Reports suggest that the discovery
could be used to help millions of women avoid miscarriages, but
Professor Achilleas Gravanis of the University of Crete medical school
said that the discovery could also be used to develop better chemical
abortifacients. [
Xinhua news agency, via Northern Light, 31 October]
US President George Bush has signalled his intention to veto a bill
currently before congress if its final version includes language
supporting destructive research on human embryos. An amendment
proposed by Senator Arlen Specter to the labor, health, human
services and education appropriations bill would authorise the
president to waive the protection for human embryos provided by the
long-standing Dickey-Wicker amendment. A statement released by the
president's administration affirmed: "The President strongly believes
that the Dickey-Wicker amendment, which for years has ensured that the
federal government observes important ethical boundaries... should not
be altered. The administration therefore strongly opposes the Senate
version of the bill which... would signal a weakening of the federal
government's commitment to protecting human embryos." [
Pro-Life
Infonet, 31 October]
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