News, 27 June 2002
The Scottish Executive is considering proposals to allow school nurses
to prescribe the abortifacient morning-after pill to pupils of any
age. A spokesman for the executive, which exercises devolved
governmental powers in Scotland, confirmed that plans to allow nurses
to prescribe a range of medications would apply to the morning-after
pill. The Lothian NHS board, which has responsibility for Edinburgh,
said that, while there were no immediate plans to make the drug
available to school pupils if the proposals were adopted, the option
would be considered. Figures have indicated that, in the year
following the reclassification of the morning-after pill as a drug
available from pharmacists throughout the UK on 1 January 2001, use of
the drug in Scotland increased by 20%. [
Edinburgh Evening News, 26
June]
Politicians from countries hoping to join the European Union are
concerned that anti-life recommendations in a report on which the
European parliament will vote in a week's time could undermine their
sovereignty, culture and laws. The current version of the Van Lancker
report advocates legal abortion and easy availability of morning-after
pills, and the candidate nations fear that such measures could
undermine popular support for membership. The centre-right European
People's Party, the largest bloc in the parliament, today tabled an
amendment stating that applicant countries should not be put under
pressure in such matters as abortion, public health services and sex
education, where nations' cultural and constitutional principles
differ. [Euro-Fam and SPUC Brussels, 27 June]
The northern Mexican state of Neuvo Leon has opened an ethical stem
cell bank for the poor. David Gomez, head of the facility at the
Autonomous University of Nuevo Leon, said that the bank would only
store stem cells taken from placentas and umbilical cords. It is hoped
that the stem cells will be used for therapy and research, thereby
making the university a leader in this field of medicine. [
LifeSite,
26 June] Ethical stem cell research constitutes a more promising
alternative to the destructive extraction of stem cells from embryos
and to so-called therapeutic cloning.
The 17th Duke of Norfolk, an opponent of abortion, has died. The Duke,
who was both a Catholic and the premier duke of England, opposed the
relaxation of abortion laws and voted against the Human Fertilisation
and Embryology Act 1990 when it was debated in the House of Lords. The
duke was a vice-chairman of the All-Party Parliamentary Pro-Life
Group. [SPUC, 27 June]
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