News, 17 April 2002
The judgement in SPUC's legal challenge to sales of the morning-after
pill will be made public tomorrow. The judgement will be handed down by
Mr Justice Munby at the high court in London at 10.15 a.m. SPUC sought
a judicial review of the British government's decision to make the
abortion-inducing morning-after pill available from pharmacists without
a doctor's prescription on the basis that the provision of
abortifacients contravenes the Offences Against the Person Act 1861.
Procuring a miscarriage remains a criminal offence in Britain, although
abortion practitioners have immunity from prosecution as long as they
adhere to certain statutory conditions set out in the Abortion Act
1967. The government has argued that the offence of procuring a
miscarriage only applies after an unborn child has implanted in his or
her mother's womb. [SPUC, 17 April]
Researchers in the US claim to have treated sufferers of multiple
sclerosis (MS) by using the patients' own stem cells. Doctors at the
University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle succeeded in
stabilising a number of MS patients by removing stem cells from their
blood, killing the cells that were working against the immune system,
and then transplanting the healthy cells back into the patients'
bodies. The researchers managed to isolate adult stem cells from the
patients' blood by generating anti-bodies to the stem cells which were
attached to tiny magnetic beads and then mixed with the blood. A
magnetic device was then used to draw out the stem cells. [
BBC News online, 16 April]
Adult stem cell technology provides a promising and ethical alternative
to the use of stem cells from embryos and so-called therapeutic
cloning.
Pro-lifers in Australia have expressed concern after the state of
Victoria's Infertility Treatment Authority gave permission for a couple
to create a designer baby to provide a suitable tissue donor for a sick
older sibling. The process will involve the creation and selection of
an embryo using in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and pre-implantation
genetic diagnosis (PGD). However, Professor Robert Jansen, the medical
director of Sydney IVF in New South Wales, has claimed that his
facility already practices PGD for the same purpose in the absence of
government restrictions. Professor Jansen commented: "Luckily we don't
have an Infertility Treatment Authority that feels that it has got to
get involved in everybody's personal reproductive business." [
Sydney Morning Herald, 17 April]
A hospital in the Indian state of Punjab has been raided by senior
state officials on suspicion of performing illegal sex-selective
abortions. The officials removed documents and surgical instruments
used in abortions from Amar Hospital in Patiala. [
Express News Service, 16 April]
Russia has started to carry out health checks on its 33.5 million
children amid concerns that the health of the nation's population has
declined dramatically since the fall of Communism. Reasons cited for
the decline include underage sexual activity and the high number of
abortions. Two in three pregnancies in Russia are ended by abortion,
and about 10 percent of abortions are performed on teenagers. [
CNN, 15 April; also see news digests for
19 March 2001,
10 October 2000, etc.]
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