News, 20 August 2003
The Age newspaper has run a feature on teenage parents in the wake of
the report that Australia has one of the highest teen pregnancy and
abortion rates in the world. The feature looks at teenagers who opted
against abortion and the challenges and difficulties they have had to
deal with. It also looks at the lack of available childcare facilities
for young mothers who wish to return to education in order to escape
the poverty trap and programmes that are trying to address the problem.
[
The Age, 19 August]
The director of a Chinese psychiatric hospital has been arrested
amid allegations that he sold women patients as wives. Wang Chaoying
reportedly drugged the women so that the buyers would not realise
initially that they were mentally ill and he is thought to have made
more than 20 such transactions since 1998. China has 70 million
bachelors unable to find wives, largely due to the one-child policy
that has resulted in the aborting of many unborn baby girls. [
The Guardian, 20 August]
The UK's first Internet baby has been born to a couple from the
south-east of England. The couple bought sperm from a website after a
series of failed IVF attempts. The Medical Ethics Alliance has called
for the site to be closed down, calling it "a gross abuse and
commercialisation of fertility care, which has consequences far beyond
the practice of simply buying sperm." [
BBC, 19 August]
Researchers from the University of Minnesota have found that adult
bone marrow stem cells can differentiate into cells of the midbrain,
Science Daily reports. The findings, which have been published in the
online early edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, suggest that the cells could be used in the future to treat
diseases of the central nervous system such as Parkinson's. [
Science Daily, 19 August]
Cambridge researchers have reported promising results of drug tests
that could eventually be used to treat endometriosis. Endometriosis is
a painful condition in which the tissue that lines the womb grows in
other parts of the pelvis and can cause infertility in women. It is
currently treated through surgery and the administering of drugs to
disrupt reproductive hormones, but it is now thought that the condition
could be treated through the use of vascular endothelial growth factor
(VEGF) inhibitors to prevent the development of the blood vessels that
supply the tissue. Endometriosis currently affects two million women in
the UK. [
BBC, 20 August]
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