News, 8 January 2002
Research by an American fertility expert suggests that a previously
unrecognised factor jeopardises the survival of embryos created through
in vitro
fertilisation (IVF). It appears that, in many cases, the mother's
immune system attacks and kills newly-conceived embryos. Professor Alan
Beer of the Chicago Medical School is suggesting that the women's
immune system treats their embryos like a cancer. He found that seven
out of 10 women in a trial group who had undergone three failed IVF
treatment cycles had higher than normal levels of the tumour necrosis
factor alpha chemical (TNF alpha), which is also responsible for
certain autoimmune diseases. When he administered treatments for
excessive TNF alpha to 100 women who had suffered repeated IVF
failures, 78% of those under 35 then became pregnant. [
BBC, 7 January]
The pro-abortion Dublin Well Woman Centre has reported an unprecedented
demand for abortifacient morning-after pills over Christmas and new
year. The centre also claimed that more Irish women than ever travelled
to Britain for abortions last year, and that the only way to reduce the
Irish abortion rate was by improving access to contraception in
Ireland. [
Irish Independent, 8 January]
An SPUC spokesman pointed out that the experience in Britain was that,
as access to contraception has increased, so has the registered
abortion rate.
New research suggests that women who smoke cannabis during
pregnancy may be stunting the growth of their children. Writing in the
British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology,
a team of researchers from the UK and New Zealand claim that the effect
of smoking one cannabis cigarette a week during pregnancy is comparable
with that of smoking 15 tobacco-only cigarettes a day. [
BBC, 7 January]
The US Senate will shortly consider legislation to prohibit all human
cloning. Under the proposed law, which has already been passed by the
House of Representatives, anyone who cloned a human being could be
imprisoned for up to 10 years and fined up to $1 million. However, it
is thought that the measure is unlikely to be passed because a majority
of senators last year expressed their support for embryonic stem cell
research. [
Washington Times, 7 January; via
Pro-Life Infonet]
US President Bush has banned the use of federal funds for destructive
research on embryos, including cloned embryos, but it presently remains
legal in private facilities.
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