News, 1 February 2002
President Bush's US administration has announced that foetuses
can be legally reclassified as unborn children. Tommy Thompson, the
health and human services secretary, explained that the change would
allow women on low incomes to access prenatal care under the State
Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP). CHIP, which is
administered by the states rather than by the federal government, is
aimed at children and has not previously been applied to the unborn.
The pro-abortion Planned Parenthood organisation condemned the move,
calling it "inflammatory, unnecessary and simply un-American". Douglas
Johnson of the National Right to Life Committee said that such
objections were "an example of an extreme pro-abortion ideology".
[
National Post online and
The Guardian, 1 February]
Scientists in the USA claim to have extracted and differentiated stem
cells from unfertilised monkey eggs. Researchers at Advanced Cell
Technology and the Wake Forest University School of Medicine say that
they have managed to get the unfertilised eggs to start dividing like
embryos in a process known as parthenogenesis. They claim that the
production of stem cells by parthenogenesis would be an ethical
alternative to the use of conventional embryos and so-called
therapeutic cloning, but ethicists and pro-lifers have disagreed. Dr
Donald Bruce, a spokesman on bioethics for the Church of Scotland,
pointed out: "If these primate embryos created by parthenogenesis seem
to have the properties of embryos--to the point that stem cells can be
derived and differentiated into various body cell types--then what we
have is an embryo." Dr Bruce added that the status of embryos was not
affected by whether or not they were viable. [
BBC News online, 31
January]
It is reported that pro-abortion organisations in the United Kingdom
are concerned about the potential implications of a victory by SPUC in
its forthcoming judicial review on the morning-after pill. SPUC is
bringing a judicial review of the decision to reclassify the
abortifacient morning-after pill as a drug available from pharmacists
without a doctor's prescription on the basis that the drug can cause
an abortion. However, the Family Planning Association (FPA) has warned
that the reasoning behind the action could be applied to all
potentially abortifacient methods of birth control, including the
intra-uterine device and the conventional oral contraceptive pill.
Tony Belfield of the FPA said: "The association is enormously
concerned. We think that people need to be very aware of what is going
on and make a noise about it." Ann Furedi of the British Pregnancy
Advisory Service, Britain's largest private abortion provider, said
that a victory for SPUC was "something that people are taking very
seriously". [
The Guardian, 1 February] The case begins in the high
court in London on Tuesday the 12th of this month.
A company in California has designed a silicon chip which it hopes
could be used to facilitate the mass production of cloned human
embryos. The chip, designed by Aegen Biosciences, contains hundreds of
tiny wells. At the bottom of each well is an even smaller hole. The
idea is to place eggs in the wells and then spin the chip very fast so
that centrifugal force pushes the nucleus of each egg out through the
hole. A new nucleus could be implanted in each egg. Dr Harry Griffin
of the Roswell Institute, which created Dolly the first cloned sheep,
pointed out that the biggest problem with mass cloning was finding an
adequate supply of eggs. [
Ananova, 30 January]
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