News, 12 July 2002
President Bush's bioethics panel has recommended a total ban on human
cloning for live birth, with a majority calling for a four-year
moratorium on cloning for research. The panel's chairman said a
temporary ban would allow for debate on the issue. Seven of the
committee's eighteen members wanted cloning for research to be
permitted immediately. Like the panel, US senators are divided on the
matter. [
Zenit and
Washington Post, 11 July]
Eggs, sperm and embryos could be identified with barcodes to help avoid mistakes in
in vitro
fertilisation (IVF). The Embryoguard system is to be clinically
trialled in the hope that it will be introduced in Europe and America
next year. [
BBC, 11 July] Barcodes would presumably appear on containers holding eggs, sperm and embryos. On Monday we
reported on how a woman who had undergone IVF had given birth to twins who could not have been hers.
A committee of the US House of Representatives has voted along party
lines to pass a bill to ban partial birth abortion. The measure also
needs approval by the house's judiciary committee, the full house, the
senate and President Bush. While Mr Bush would sign the bill, it is
unclear if Senator Tom Daschle, the senate leader, will let it through.
President Clinton vetoed two similar bills. [
LifeSite, 11 July]
An anti-euthanasia group has repeated its request to Canadian
authorities to use the law to stop the supply of bags with which people
would commit suicide. No response has been received from police since
last year when the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition sent them details of
Right to Die's "Exit Bags" with a request for action. The coalition has
also sent MPs and law officers copies of a video it made about the
bags. [
LifeSite, 11 July]
A drug which increases blood flow through the lungs could help
premature babies survive. Tests at Duke University, North Carolina,
suggest that O-nitrosoethanol can relieve potentially fatal persistent
pulmonary hypertension in newborn children. [
BBC, 12 July] The lungs are the last organs to be fully formed.
Fertility clinics could be seeking to boost their success rates by
implanting too many embryos, choosing younger patients and recommending
un-necessary treatment.
New Scientist
magazine reports claims by Mr Jacques Cohen, director of St Barnabas'
institute, New Jersey, that the clinics use multiple implantation to
achieve high rankings in tables showing successful
in vitro
fertilisation. The magazine describes how multiple pregnancies are
riskier for mothers and babies, though some parents welcome the
prospect of twins as a way of having a small family quickly. [
LifeSite, 11 July]
The Catholic church in Scotland has criticised the provision of
abortifacient morning-after pills to participants in a music festival
this weekend. A spokesman described the initiative at
T in the Park
in Kinross, Perthshire, as cashing in on vulnerable people. Schering
Health Care will use leaflets to promote their Levonelle morning-after
pills at the event. [
BBC, 12 July]
SPUC has welcomed state paternity benefits, which British fathers will receive from next April [
BBC, 11 July],
but wants more focus on care in pregnancy. Paul Tully, SPUC's general
secretary, said: "We welcome this move to enable fathers to be more
involved with their newborn children. However, it is far more critical
that fathers are encouraged to support expectant mothers in the early
stages of pregnancy, if we are to help avert abortions which continue
at around 500 per day in Britain."
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