News, 11 December 2002
The British government is to spend £40 million on stem cell research over two years. [
Ananova, 9 December] SPUC has
condemned
the almost six-fold increase in funding for research which is aimed at
finding ways to generate tissue for spare-parts surgery from cloned
human embryos. Paul Tully, SPUC's general secretary, said: "This is a
calculated move to promote profiteering at the expense of human beings
in the very first days of their lives. In other countries, where
cloning of human embryos has been rejected on ethical grounds,
treatments from adult-derived stem cells are already in the pipeline,
but Mr Tony Blair believes that Britain can gain from the lack of
international competition in the field of cloned-embryo stem-cell
research." In January of last year the UK parliament approved
government proposals to change the law to sanction stem cell research
on cloned embryos - so-called therapeutic cloning.
The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority is said to be
planning unannounced inspections of Britain's 115 fertility clinics.
The authority's annual report, due to be published tomorrow, is said to
contain plans for a new code of conduct under which spot checks will be
made to ensure correct storage and use of eggs, sperm and embryos. The
code is expected to require that witnesses are present when sperm and
eggs are labelled for storage. The authority is also said to be
installing a new computer system to enable it to produce statistics for
how many couples undergo IVF, something which it admits it cannot
presently do. [
Independent, 11 December]
Leading British fertility specialists have called for a limit of two
embryos per IVF cycle, claming that it would reduce multiple
pregnancies and thus save government money. Mr Richard Kennedy,
secretary to the British Fertility Society, has pointed out that
multiple pregnancies are costly to the state and funds saved by
limiting implantations could be used to make free IVF more widely
available. Mr Allan Templeton of the Royal College of Obstetricians and
Gynaecologists claims that avoiding all IVF triplets could release
enough government funds to cover all IVF treatment. The specialists'
comments will be included in recommendations to the government on IVF
by the National Institute of Clinical Excellence. [
Telegraph, 8 December]
A Scottish woman has been told that five embryos created with another
woman's eggs and her ex-husband's sperm have been destroyed at his
request. Mrs Margaret Grant of Inverness, who was divorced in January
of last year, has asked her member of parliament to help get a change
to rules on IVF. She says her only chance of having a family has been
snatched from her. [
BBC, 9 December]
One of the UK's few home birthing teams is to be disbanded. The service
has been run by North Middlesex hospital, Edmonton, London. [
Evening Standard, 9 December]
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