News, 1 October 2002
The Society for the Protection of Unborn Children (SPUC) has expressed
concern over latest population figures which reveal that there are now
more over-60s than under-16s for the first time among the UK
population. SPUC general secretary Paul Tully commented: "Since 1970
there has been a fall in births of one-third. The promotion of abortion
and birth control by both private and public agencies, and with massive
public funding, have been a major factor in this. These figures show
that the systematic promotion of abortion not only has a devastating
impact on the lives of individual mothers and babies, but is indirectly
fuelling the growing pressure for euthanasia." [
SPUC, 1 October,
BBC, 30 September]
Ultrasound doctors in Australia have cast doubt on whether women need
to know whether their unborn child may have a remote chance of minor
fetal abnormality. The Sydney Morning Herald reports Lachlan de
Crespigny, director of ultrasound at Royal Women's Hospital in
Melbourne, as stating that pre-natal ultrasound examinations are
wrongly regarded as routine, often reveal only "imprecise signs" of
fetal abnormality and that many expectant mothers have asked doctors
not to share "inconclusive findings" with them. [
Sydney Morning Herald, 30 September]
Prenatal testing is often used to "search and destroy" unborn children
found to have even minor abnormalities. In Britain, a national magazine
survey of 3,000 mothers has found that 68 per cent of mothers said that
they had been "worried" about pre-natal tests. The survey, commissioned
by Mother & Baby magazine, also found that 23% of mothers had a
Caesarean section delivery and 25% complained maternity unit staff had
been "lacking in compassion and cold". [Mother & Baby, November
2002 edition]
The cardinal-archbishop of Detroit, Michigan, is due to issue a
statement this Sunday stating that politicians have "a special moral
obligation" to oppose abortion. In a new pastoral letter, Cardinal Adam
Maida will state that politicians cannot "justify inaction with regard
to the dignity of human life simply on the grounds that abortion is the
law of the land". The pastoral letter is to be read at all Masses in
the Detroit archdiocese marking the annual Respect Life Sunday, which
begins a month-long observance of Catholic opposition to anti-life
practices. Cardinal Maida will also state that "[w]hen it is impossible
to overturn or prevent passage of a law which allows or promotes
abortion, an elected official should always seek to limit the harm done
by such laws." The body representing Michigan's Catholic bishops has
issued a guide for voters in this month's election for Michigan state
governor, which describes abortion as "the preeminent threat to human
dignity because it directly attacks life itself." Cardinal Maida had
previously opposed a failed referendum proposal to legalise assisted
suicide. [Detroit News, 29 September, via
Pro-Life Infonet, 1 October]
Pro-life delegates at the United Nations have managed to delay the
progress of a proposal to ban human cloning for live-birth but allow
destructive research on cloned human embryos (see
news-digest for 27 September).
After five days of discussion in New York, the Working Group on an
International Convention against Reproductive Cloning of Human Beings
was unable to reach a consensus on language for a ban on human cloning,
with the United States, the Holy See and several European countries
seeking a moratorium on all types of human cloning until consensus on a
ban on human cloning is agreed. Negotiations are due to resume next
month. [SPUC delegate Peter C. Smith, 1 October]
US scientists have grown teeth from animal adult stem cells.
Researchers at the Forsyth Institute, Boston, took cells from adult
pigs and cultured them inside the abdomens of rats, which resulted in
recognisable tooth crowns containing enamel and dentin. The research is
due to be published in the Journal of Dental Research next week. Adult
stem cell therapies may offer an ethical and rapidly-advancing
alternative to destructive research on human embryos. [Daily Mail, 28
September].
Approximately 1,000 infants have been born using preimplantation
genetic diagnosis (PGD), scientists said yesterday. At a news
conference at the Reproductive Genetics Institute in Chicago, USA, the
Institute's president Yury Verlinsky claimed that PGD benefits both
couples and society by eliminating the cost of care for disabled
children. [
Associated Press via Kaiser Daily Reproductive Health Report, 1 October]
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