News, 1 July 2002
The Scottish first minister has ordered health boards in Scotland to
shelve any plans to make the abortifacient morning-after pill available
in schools. It is reported that Jack McConnell, who leads the Scottish
Executive, yesterday described proposals to allow school nurses to
dispense the drug [see
digest for 27 June]
as "stupid and irresponsible". Peter Kearney, a spokesman for the
Catholic Church in Scotland, welcomed the move but challenged Mr
McConnell to explain why the executive continued to support the
provision of the morning-after pill to children in pharmacies.
[Scottish
Daily Mail, 1 July]
The Irish government has confirmed that it has no intention of
legislating on abortion. Michael McDowell, the justice minister, said
that there was no appetite in the government for further abortion
legislation after the defeat of its abortion referendum proposals in
March. [
The Irish Examiner, 1 July]
No abortions may take place in Ireland because unborn life is
constitutionally protected from the moment of conception and the X-case
judgement in 1992, which authorised abortion in cases of threatened
suicide, has never been legislated for.
The British government has pledged to make free abortions more
readily available to schoolgirls. As part of the same initiative that
will see school children under 16 receiving free contraceptives and
morning-after pills at school in England and Wales [see
digest for 28 June],
the department of health will encourage schools to provide confidential
sex advice clinics and increase abortion provision on the National
Health Service. [
The Independent, 28 June]
The chief executive of Tesco, a British supermarket chain, has agreed
to review his company's policy of providing the abortifacient
morning-after pill free of charge to teenagers. Mrs Elizabeth Lewis,
who works for the Life charity and is also a Tesco share-holder,
attended Tesco's annual general meeting last month and secured a
commitment from Mr Terry Leahy, the chief executive, to review the
practice. Mr Leahy had previously refused to comment on the matter. [
Catholic Times, 30 June; see
news digest for 18 June]
Official statistics have revealed that more in vitro fertilisation
(IVF) treatment cycles are undertaken in Germany than in any other
European country, with France in second place and the UK in third.
Denmark still comes first in terms of the number of IVF cycles per
inhabitant. The number of IVF cycles undertaken in Europe rose by 24%
between 1997 and 1999. In 1999 there were 249,624 IVF cycles undertaken
across Europe, 60,723 of which were in Germany, 51,868 in France, and
30,868 in the UK. Spain, Ireland and Italy joined eastern European
countries such as the Ukraine and Hungary at the top of the league of
countries with the highest proportion of three of more embryos being
transferred in each IVF cycle. [
BBC News online, 1 July]
It is thought that only about 1.7 percent of conceptions generated by
IVF treatment result in a live birth, meaning that the vast majority of
unborn children die in the process.
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