News, 26 February 2002
A House of Lords' committee is reported to have concluded that it
supports British parliamentary approval for the creation of cloned
humans who may be experimented on but are denied the chance to be born.
SPUC has condemned the conclusions as "whitewash". Anthony Ozimic of
SPUC said: "This report will have no credibility, as the committee's
membership was stacked with supporters of human cloning, many with
close links to bodies with a vested interest in embryo research. Only
two out of 11 members had voted against the government's cloning
regulations in January last year. The committee's chairman, the Bishop
of Oxford, has long been an advocate of human cloning. His
controversial religious views on the embryo have been used as a veneer
to cloak the committee's bias in favour of destructive embryo research.
Only pro-cloning scientists were explicitly invited by the committee to
give evidence and even the committee's scientific advisor, Professor
Christopher Higgins, is also an advocate of human cloning. Furthermore,
it seems like the purpose of this committee has been to provide
justification for a law which has already been passed." [
SPUC, 26 February]
The UK's Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) has unprecedentedly approved a request for
in vitro
fertilisation treatment during which embryos will be discarded or
frozen if, once born, they cannot provide transplant-tissue for the
parents' son. Zain Hashmi, aged two, of Leeds has thalassaemia, a
potentially fatal blood-disease, and material would be taken from his
new sibling's umbilical cord. [
Telegraph, 23 February]
Pro-life groups criticised the HFEA's decision while churches'
responses were mixed. SPUC's Paul Tully said: "We condemn the HFEA's
sanctioning of the destruction of any number of embryos simply because
they do not happen to be a good tissue-match for the young boy. The
selection of an embryo in this way brings us to the brink of genetic
manipulation of our progeny." Professor Jack Scarisbrick of Life said:
"One understands the plight of the parents, but we have to hold on to
our principles in these difficult circumstances." The Catholic diocese
of Leeds said that: "the artificial nature of the conception would
cause difficulty for Roman Catholic theologians since it cannot be
accommodated within the Church's teaching on the transmission of human
life." The Church of England's board for social responsibility pointed
out that the baby would be used as a means to an end but added:
"Although this could not be said to be a good situation of itself, in
this particular case the end is to save a life, and for this one may
make many sacrifices." Anglican Bishop Nazir-Ali of Rochester, chairman
of the HFEA's ethics committee, said that harm was being minimised and
good maximised. [
Telegraph and
SPUC,
23 February] Six British couples are reported to have asked for the
same sort of procedure as the Hashmis and others are said to have gone
to America for it. The HFEA denies that it has opened the floodgates
for multiple applications but will consider each case individually.
[
Times, 25 February]
Still-undecided voters will determine whether Ireland's constitution is
amended to define abortion as happening after implantation, according
to an opinion poll. The survey in
Ireland on Sunday
suggested that, while 29% supported the amendment and 27% opposed it,
30% were still deciding how to vote in tomorrow-week's referendum.
[
Times, 25 February]
An operation on a baby of 23 weeks' gestation seems to have been
successful in preventing a fatal heart-defect. Around the middle of
last year Massachusetts cardiologists watched on ultrasound as they
used a minute balloon attached to a wire to widen a 2.5 mm diameter
valve.
[
BBC, 26 February]
Bad maternity care is causing 200 infant deaths every year according to
a study funded by the British government. The report, due out in June,
claims that one mother in five gets ineffective care. Leeds university
researchers looked at 2,000 cases in 20 hospitals, where fewer than
two-thirds of doctors followed current obstetric guidelines. [
Observer, 24 February]
The Australian federal cabinet has rejected a parliamentary committee's recommendation that embryos created through
in vitro
fertilisation should be used for research, though it is unclear how
such experimentation might be banned. Opposition to embryo-research has
been led by Mr Kevin Andrews, the minister for aging, who was also
instrumental in overturning a pro-euthanasia law in the country's
Northern Territory. [
Zenit, 25 February]
The Belgian Free University intends to teach medical students to
perform euthanasia, which is expected to be approved by the country's
lower house of parliament this year. [
LifeSite, 25 February]
The Catholic diocese of Hertogenbosch, the Netherlands, has warned that
it will not perform burial-services for those presently considering
euthanasia, which is already legal in that country. [
LifeSite, 25 February]
Aspirin could protect unborn children from a virus which can cause
developmental anomalies, according to a study to be published tomorrow
in the proceedings of the US National Academy of Sciences. Researchers
in New Jersey suggest that the painkiller could fight human
cytomegalovirus. [
Telegraph, 26 February] Fish or fish-oil supplements could prevent premature births, according to a Danish study of 8,000 women published in the
British Medical Journal. [
Guardian, 22 February]
Mothers' obesity before pregnancy can cause developmental problems in
unborn children and can give expectant women diabetes and high blood
pressure. Children of obese mothers run a higher risk of being obese
themselves, as well as a greater likelihood of cardiovascular disease
and diabetes. The warnings come from Dr Richard Deckelbaum, professor
of nutrition at Columbia university, New York. [
BBC, 25 February] Fibroids in the womb could be caused by genetic defects in women, say British and Finnish researchers in a report in
Nature Genetics. Fibroids can cause bleeding and/or miscarriage, and mutations in the fumarate hydratase gene appear to cause them. [
BBC, 25 February]
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