News, 4 February 2003
Couples in the north-east of England hoping for free IVF fertility
treatment on the National Health Service (NHS) have been told that that
they face an eight-year waiting list and will be removed from the list
at the age of 40. The announcement means that women aged over 33 are
unlikely to be able to conceive IVF babies on the NHS and will have to
use private clinics. About 20,000 couples now undergo IVF treatment
every year in Britain, mostly at private clinics. [Telegraph online, 2
February] A spokesman for SPUC commented: "It is a sad reflection on
the state of modern society that rights have replaced responsibilities
in the area of reproduction. On the one hand there is a perceived right
to avoid giving birth to a child by having an abortion, and on the
other hand there is a perceived right to become pregnant at all costs.
This attitude is immensely costly in human life because both abortion
and IVF treatment lead to the deaths of many thousands of babies in
Britain each year."
Last Saturday was the sixth anniversary of legal abortion on
demand in South Africa. The Choice on Termination of Pregnancy Act,
which came into effect on 1 February 1996, allowed abortion on demand
up to the 12th week of pregnancy for women over 16, and up to the 20th
week of pregnancy in some cases. Christians for Truth, a South African
pro-life group, is considering action against a newspaper in
KwaZulu-Natal which refused to publish its advertisement marking the
anniversary. The advertisement claimed that 265,398 unborn babies had
lost their lives "in the six-year holocaust of legal abortions on
demand". [
iafrica.com, 4 February]
An investigation has found that British doctors are failing to diagnose
foetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) in children. FAS is caused by excessive
maternal alcohol consumption during pregnancy and manifests itself in a
variety of symptoms such as behavioural and learning problems and
stunted physical development later in life. A survey of members of the
Foetal Alcohol Syndrome Trust conducted by the BBC's Newsnight
programme found that a quarter had waited more than a year to get a
diagnosis of FAS. [
BBC News online, 4 February]
Marie Stopes International (MSI), an international promoter and
provider of abortion based in London, is utilising humour in a new
advertising campaign to promote birth control methods, including the
abortifacient morning-after pill. Posters aimed at young people feature
cartoon characters Wilbert Willy and Elsie Egg. [MSI release, 4
February] John Smeaton, SPUC's national director, observed: "The
morning-after pill is not a laughing matter because it endangers the
health of those who take it and can work by causing an early abortion.
Sir Liam Donaldson, the government's Chief Medical Officer, has told
all doctors to be extra vigilant about the morning-after pill because
it is associated with a higher rate of ectopic pregnancy."
The managers of the bookstore at the Catholic University of
America (CUA) in Washington DC have cancelled the appearance of a
pro-abortion congresswoman after students objected. Delegate Eleanor
Holmes Norton, the District of Columbia's non-voting representative in
Congress, had been due to sign copies of her new book at CUA tomorrow,
but pro-life students complained and the bookstore's manager cancelled
the event. CUA policy states that administrators may block speakers
"who advocate policies counter to Church teaching". [
Washington Post, 3 February]
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