News, 9 April 2003
A survey commissioned by British research organisations has indicated
that a majority of the public support destructive medical research on
human embryos in certain circumstances. The survey, commissioned by a
coalition of organisations including the Parkinson's Disease Society
and the Medical research Council (MRC), found that seven out of 10
people supported embryo research with a view to treating serious
diseases and in fertility research. However, only a sixth of
respondents supported embryo research for all types of medical
research. Sir George Radda, chief executive of the MRC, said that he
was encouraged by the results and added that the UK was "one of the
world leaders in ethically developing this area of research within a
strict legal framework". [
BBC News online, 9 April]
A spokesman for SPUC disagreed and said: "The sacrificing of human life
for medical research can never be ethical, and the UK has nothing to
proud of in leading the world in moral infamy. Ethical adult stem cell
technology is where the future lies."
The final debate on a government bill to regulate human
reproductive technologies has begun in the Canadian House of Commons.
The bill would authorise destructive research on IVF embryos, but could
also authorise human cloning despite an anti-cloning amendment already
passed. Paul Szabo, an MP belonging to the governing Liberal party and
an expert in this field, has warned that the bill could allow for the
creation of human clones and their gestation up to nine months because
it relies on the case law definition of "human being", according to
which a human being is only recognised as such from birth. Despite the
government's majority in the House of Commons, it is expected that the
bill will have a rough ride because even a number of Liberal MPs have
expressed grave reservations about it. [
LifeSite and
Globe and Mail, 8 April]
The Republic of Ireland's National Maternity Hospital has claimed that
the high number of Irish women who have abortions in Britain explains
in part the decline in the percentage of women giving birth between the
ages of 20 and 24. The hospital's 30-year analysis of births found a
growing number of teenage births and also a growing trend towards women
bearing children in their late 20s and early 30s, but a decline in
births to 20 to 24-year-olds. Women in this latter age-group are also
the most likely to travel outside the state to have abortions. In 1999,
the number of abortions in Britain on women with addresses in the Irish
Republic equated to 12% of the total number of births in Ireland.
[Irish Examiner, 9 April]
The state assembly of Nevada has passed an amendment which would
prohibit pharmacists from refusing to dispense the abortifacient
morning-after pill and other drugs on religious grounds. The move,
which represented a victory for Planned Parenthood, completely altered
the original intention of the bill which was to prevent employers from
disciplining pharmacists who refused to provide drugs on account of
their religious beliefs. A Republican assembly member is now planning
to introduce a further amendment which would allow pharmacists to
abstain from providing certain drugs if they had a "personal, ethical
or religious" objection. [
LifeSite, 8 April;
Review Journal, 4 April]
Dr Panayiotis Zavos has released a photograph of a single four-day-old
embryo comprising of about eight to ten cells which he claims is "the
first cloned embryo for reproductive purposes". The embryo was
reportedly created by somatic cell nuclear transfer - the same
technique used to produce Dolly the cloned sheep. Dr Zavos now plans to
screen cloned embryos for 'defects' before he attempts to implant any
inside women. Advanced Cell Technology in Massachusetts claimed to have
produced a cloned human embryo in 1999, but this was for experimental
rather than reproductive purposes. Claims by Clonaid to have produced
five born-alive cloned babies remain unproved and highly doubtful.
[SPUC, 9 April; with information from New Scientist, 3 April]
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