News, 21 February 2003
The German parliament has almost unanimously urged the government to
support a worldwide ban on human cloning.
Members of all major parties, including Chancellor Gerhard Schröder's
social democrats, supported the declaration, which is nevertheless not
binding on the government.
The declaration observes that all cloning produces human embryos and is
an assault on human dignity.
Germany and France are presently advancing a policy at the United
Nations which would ban cloning for birth but allow it for research. A
leading German Christian democrat expects the two countries to abandon
this position. UN negotiations on this issue resume in September.
[
Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute, 21 February]
The English appeal court has ruled that a woman's former partner is not
the legal father of her three-year-old daughter who was conceived
through IVF with anonymous donor sperm.
The man signed forms to agree to IVF for the woman with whom he was
then living but the relationship ended before IVF produced a live
birth.
Lady Justice Hale said the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act
stated that, in IVF treatment, legal fatherhood was established at
implantation.
The un-identified people involved are from Merseyside.
[
BBC, 20 February, and
SPUC summary, 7 February]
Pro-life lobbyists are concerned that Canadian MPs have received very
little notice of today's debate on the use of human stem cells.
Consideration of the Assisted Human Reproduction Act was only announced
at 3 pm yesterday and many opposition party MPs from western Canada
customarily visit their ridings (constituencies) on Fridays.
The debate was not on the parliamentary long-term schedule nor is it on
today's order paper which was published yesterday. The bill has been
given priority over discussion of the budget and the Iraq situation.
[
LifeSite, 20 February]
The judiciary committee of the Kentucky house of representatives has
rejected a bill to ban all human cloning by nine votes to seven. The
house passed a similarly comprehensive ban last year but it stalled in
the senate. A measure to permit embryo research is pending in the
house.
[
Cincinnati Enquirer, 21 February]
A counselling organisation in Oregon is said to have helped up to 30
people obtain the means to commit suicide last year.
Compassion in Dying assisted 21 people in this way in 2000 and 17 in
2001.
Oregon legalised assisted suicide in 1998. The US attorney general is
trying to overturn that law. Arizona is considering legalising assisted
suicide.
[
Reuters on LifeSite, 20 February]
Drinking coffee in pregnancy increases the likelihood of stillbirth,
according to a Danish study of some 18,500 women between 1989 and 1996.
Aarhus university found that women who drank more than seven cups a day
were twice as likely to miscarry as those who drank no coffee. Caffeine
could reduce the placental oxygen supply to the unborn and/or damage
their hearts.
[
British Medical Journal on
BBC, 21 February]
Herbal medicines could harm pregnant women and foetuses, and could
react adversely with drugs and procedures used in pregnancy. Research
by Brigham and Women's hospital and Harvard medical school suggests
that the lowering in blood-pressure caused by taking St John's wort can
deprive foetuses of blood and oxygen. Ginger and garlic can inhibit
blood-clotting. The study's authors urge pregnant women to tell their
doctors about any herbal substance they are taking. [
National Women's Health Information Center, 18 February]
A Yale university study has challenged the conventional view that
premature babies' IQ cannot increase. The research on some 300 children
suggests that those receiving early speech therapy, those in two-parent
families, and those with educated mothers have an enhanced opportunity
to recover for neurological damage. [
Journal of the American Medical Association on
CNN, 12 February]
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