News, 30 May 2002
A British surgeon has been defending his decision to carry out an
abortion on a female patient without her consent. The General Medical
Council's professional conduct committee has heard that Reginald Dixon,
a consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist, discovered that Barbara
Whiten, a 35-year-old college lecturer, was pregnant in the course of a
hysterectomy operation in 1993. Mr Dixon decided to continue with the
operation at the King's Mill, Nottinghamshire, because he thought it
was in the patient's best interests. However, Mrs Whiten, who had not
known she was pregnant, later complained that the abortion had blighted
her life. The hearing continues. [
BBC News online, 29 May]
A Canadian study has found that a significant reason for the decline in
the infant mortality rate is that more women are deciding to abort
unborn children found to have developmental anomalies in the womb. A
study conducted by Health Canada and published in the Journal of the
American Medical Association states that, while the overall Canadian
abortion rate was stable over the last seven years, the number of
children being aborted between the 20th and 21st weeks of
pregnancy--when most amniocentesis tests are performed--increased almost
sevenfold. [
CBC News, 28 May;
LifeSite, 29 May]
An appeals court in Wisconsin has upheld the decision of a lower court
to throw out a so-called wrongful life suit. The parents of a boy who
was born by Caesarean section at less than 24 weeks' gestation claimed
that doctors had failed to inform them that he might be disabled, and
that this failure had meant that they were not given the opportunity to
decide whether treatment should be withheld. In the event, the child
was born with a variety of neurological disorders. The appeals court
found that "in the absence of a persistent vegetative state, the right
of a parent to withhold life-sustaining treatment from a child does not
exist." [
The Washington Times, 29 May]
A minister from the Chinese state family planning commission has
admitted to the British government that abuses have occurred in its
population control programme. Baroness Amos, a parliamentary
under-secretary of state at the foreign and commonwealth office, told
the House of Lords in a written answer yesterday that the Chinese
official had told Claire Short, Britain's international development
secretary, that abuses had occurred but that the culprits would be
prosecuted. [
House of Lords Hansard, 29 May]
The local health board in Northern Kentucky is to decide next month
whether to refuse federal funding for birth control drugs and devices,
including the conventional contraceptive pill, on the basis that they
can work as abortifacients. Northern Kentucky Right to Life has placed
a full-page advertisement in a local newspaper informing readers: "Many
things denominated as 'contraceptive' are truly abortifacient--the IUD,
Norplant, the so-called morning-after pill and the so-called standard
birth control pill." The 29-member health board will vote on whether to
refuse federal 'title X' funding for birth control on 19 June, and
reports suggest that the outcome is currently too close to call. [
The Cincinnati Enquirer, 26 May]
An American Nobel laureate has used a graduation ceremony to attack
opponents of human cloning, comparing them to people who bomb abortion
clinics. Steven Weinberg, who won the Nobel prize for physics in 1979,
told participants in the ceremony that "even here in America we have
religious zealots ... who try to ban research on therapeutic cloning
... and who, in extreme cases, bomb abortion clinics." [
Pro-Life Infonet, 29 May]
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