News, 2 December 2002
Two English primary care trusts have withdrawn permission from Tesco
supermarkets to provide the abortifacient morning-after pill free of
charge because Tesco has decided not to provide the drug to under-16s.
It is reported that the Central Cheshire Primary Care Trust (PCT) has
followed the decision of the PCT in Bury, Greater Manchester, to
rescind a so-called patient group direction which had allowed Tesco
pharmacies to provide the drug to women without the usual £20 charge.
Four Tesco stores in central Cheshire had been operating the scheme,
but the PCT decided that Tesco's refusal to include under-16s in the
scheme constituted a breach of its agreement with the supermarket
chain. Tesco decided earlier this year to discontinue its participation
in government-backed schemes to provide the morning-after pill to
under-16s in response to a concerted campaign by pro-lifers. [
The Sentinel, 27 November]
A court has heard that an audit of British IVF clinics found that five
of them had fewer or more human embryos in storage than could be
accounted for. In her evidence in the trial of Paul Fielding, an
embryologist accused of faking embryo implants, Dr Christine O'Toole of
the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) revealed that
five out of 114 IVF centres had been found to have the wrong number of
embryos in storage and that, in one clinic, three embryos were found by
chance in ice at the bottom of a storage tank. Dr O'Toole said that the
audit had been carried out in late 2000, and that sanctions had been
taken against the five un-named clinics where anomalies were
identified. [
BBC News online, 29 November]
A pregnant 12-year-old has explained why she decided to keep her child
in an interview to be screened tonight on British national television.
Amy Crowhurst told ITV1's Tonight with Trevor McDonald programme that
she decided against an abortion when she saw her unborn baby's image
during an ultrasound scan. Amy, who became pregnant following a brief
encounter at a youth club, will be helped by her mother to bring up the
child. Amy's story has also been covered in many national and local
newspapers across the UK. [
Scotsman, 2 December]
The government of Slovakia is considering a proposal to increase the
amount women have to pay for an abortion by nearly 100%. Medical
experts have recommended a rise in the amount charged for an abortion
from Sk3,000 (£46) to Sk5,500 (£84) which would more accurately reflect
the financial cost of the procedure. The price of an abortion in
Slovakia has remained the same for 10 years, during which time the
costs have rocketed while the number of women requesting an abortion
has fallen by 50%. Slovakia's abortion rate of about 44 abortions for
every 100 births remains significantly higher than the average rate in
western Europe and the US. [
The Slovak Spectator, 2 December]
The new Republican majority leader of the US Senate has announced that
up to five anti-abortion bills will be put before congress before the
end of next year. Senator Trent Lott said that the measures would
include a ban on partial-birth abortions, a law granting legal status
to unborn children and a law making it a crime to assist a minor to
have an abortion without the knowledge of the minor's parents. [Daily
Telegraph online, 1 December]
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