News, 29 November 2002
The government of Namibia has ruled out liberalising abortion law for
at least the next 10 years. Dr Libertina Amathila, the Namibian health
minister, appeared to support legalised abortion, but said that
pressure from religious groups meant that the people would not accept
it. A law dating from 1975 outlaws abortion in Namibia in most cases,
although there are a number of exceptions. A draft law to liberalise
the law further was proposed in 1996, but was shelved three years later
in the face of vigorous pro-life campaigning. [
AllAfrica.com, 28 November; via Northern Light]
Health managers in south Wales have admitted that they mistakenly
informed a pregnant woman that she had a rare blood disorder which
would probably result in her child being stillborn. After doctors at
Llandough hospital told 23-year-old Francesca Mears that she had a
serious form of thalassaemia, she went as far as making an appointment
for an abortion. She decided to keep her child, and when she gave birth
to a healthy son, it was revealed that she did not have thalassaemia at
all. Ms Mears now intends to sue the Cardiff and Vale NHS Trust over
the mistake. [
icWales, 29 November]
Two opinion polls in the US have indicated the existence of a growing
generation gap on the issue of abortion, with younger people being far
more likely to oppose abortion than their parents or grandparents. In a
Zogby poll, one third of respondents aged between 18 and 29 believed
that abortion should never be legal, compared to 23% of those aged 30
to 64 and 20% of those aged over 65. A similar poll conducted by the
University of California, Berkeley, found that people aged between 15
and 26 were about 10 percentage points more likely than older people to
support restrictions on abortion. [
Yahoo! News, 28 November]
Scientists have discussed the possibility of injecting human stem cells
into mouse embryos in a debate at the New York Academy of Sciences.
Some scientists believe that this could result in mice which would
respond to diseases in a more 'human' way, allowing researchers to
develop more effective treatments. However, others are concerned that
the resulting creatures would be like mouse-human hybrids because the
stem cells could lead to the development of human brain cells or sperm
in the mice if they were allowed to grow to maturity. [
BBC News online
and Metro, 28 November] Reports do not indicate whether the scientists
were discussing the use of stem cells destructively extracted from
embryos or adult stem cells.
A meeting of IVF experts in Japan has been told about successful
trials of a new fertility treatment which may avoid some of the many
ethical problems of IVF. Dr Osamu Kato told an IVF society meeting in
Kobe about the success of clinical trials of a technique whereby a
doctor removes ripe ova from a woman after she has had sexual
intercourse and places them in the back of the uterus, directly in the
path of the sperm. The technique should avoid the massive loss of early
human life which is usually involved in IVF treatment. [
LifeSite, 28 November]
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