News, 4 January 2002
The morning-after pill has been banned in the Philippines because it
can cause an abortion. The Philippines bureau of food and drugs has
banned the importation, sale and use of Postinor, the tradename under
which levonorgestrel 0.75 mg was marketed in the Philippines, thereby
reversing a decision to register the drug on 7 December last year. All
supplies of the drug currently in the Philippines have been recalled.
Anyone who continues to import, sell or prescribe the drug in the
Philippines will now face heavy penalties and criminal charges. A
statement issued by the Bureau and signed by the secretary of health
reads: "The Bureau, after careful and thorough evaluation of the
position papers and research ... has determined with the concurrence
of the Secretary of Health that Postinor has abortifacient effect and
contravenes existing provisions of law on the matter." [Philippines
Bureau of Food and Drugs circular no.18, 2001; Family Front
International media release, 4 January] SPUC, which is currently
engaged in a legal action to restrict provision of the morning-after
pill in the UK on the basis that it causes abortions, welcomed the
news and congratulated all those involved in the campaign against the
drug in the Philippines.
Dolly the sheep, the world's first cloned mammal, has developed
arthritis at an unexpectedly early age. Professor Ian Wilmut of the
Roslin Institute in Edinburgh, Scotland, said that Dolly's condition
may have been brought on by genetic defects caused by the cloning
process, and called for more research into the impact of cloning on
the health of cloned animals. [
BBC News online, 4 January] Dominic
Baster of SPUC observed: "Professor Wilmut's admission that little is
known about the impact of the cloning process should be seen as a
warning of the hidden dangers to adult human health of so-called
therapeutic cloning. It further strengthens the case for the ethical
alternative to so-called therapeutic cloning provided by adult stem
cell technology."
The Canadian Society of Obstetrics and Gynaecology is urging doctors
to give women open-ended prescriptions for the abortifacient
morning-after pill so that they can obtain the drug without visiting
their doctor repeatedly. To date, the only Canadian provinces which
have amended provincial law to make the morning-after pill available
without prescription are British Columbia and Quebec, but a number of
groups are calling for the reclassification of the drug at the federal
level. Mark Beaudet, vice-president of sales and marketing for Paladin
Labs Inc., the company which distributes the Plan-B morning-after pill
in Canada, said that an application would be made this year to
reclassify Plan-B as a "behind-the-counter" drug available from
pharmacists. [
Globe and Mail, 3 January; via Pro-Life E-News]
New research has suggested that women who smoke during pregnancy are
exposing their children to increased risks of diabetes and obesity in
later life. The Swedish research is published in the British Medical
Journal and is based on a group of Britons born in 1954 and monitored
for smoking habits, diabetes and weight. The incidence of diabetes
among those whose mothers smoked during pregnancy was a third more
than doctors would have expected. [
BBC News online, 4 January]
The governor of Michigan has signed a law which promotes end of life
care. The new law is intended to promote better pain management for
terminally ill patients and to improve access to hospice care.
Governor John Engler said that patients should be entitled to expect
effective and compassionate care at the end of their lives. Pro-life
groups welcomed the measure as a means of providing positive,
life-affirming alternatives to assisted suicide. [AP, 3 January; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
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