News, 8 July 2003
The European Commission is to publish proposed guidelines on research
grants tomorrow, a move that has sparked fears of a confrontation over
the proposal to give grants for human embryonic stem cell research
involving 'spare' IVF embryos. Italy, Portugal, Spain, Germany and
Ireland have expressed most ethical concerns about funding embryonic
stem cell research and may resist the proposals. The creation of
embryos for research purposes, legal in the UK, will not be granted
funding by the EU. The Commission hopes to have its guidelines in place
in time for the ending of the moratorium on embryonic stem cell
research funding in December. [
Financial Times, 8 July]
The UNFPA has been involved in coercive abortion and forced
sterilisations in several countries, according to investigations by the
Peruvian Congress, the US State Department and the Population Research
Institute (PRI). The Peruvian Congress report claims that the UNFPA
gave the Peruvian government millions of dollars to fund forced and
coercive sterilisation and acted as Technical Secretary to the
sterilisation campaign. According to a letter from the US State
Department Delegation to China sent to Secretary Colin Powell last
year, "the 32 counties in which UNFPA is involved the population
programs of the PRC retain coercive elements in law and practice."
UNFPA supporters deny the charges. [
LifeNews.com, 7 July]
Adult bone marrow cells could be used to repair nerve cells damaged by
injury and diseases such as MS, according to researchers from Yale. Dr
Jeffrey Kocsis, associate director of the Neuroscience and Regeneration
Research Center at Yale University, and his colleagues, have
transplanted stem cells from adult bone marrow into rats, producing
substantial nerve cell growth. Dr Kocsis has said that he would
consider testing the procedure on a human being in the near future. Dr
Timothy Vollmer, chairman of neurology at the Barrows Neurological
Institute in Phoenix and a leading MS researcher, claims that the
potential shown by bone marrow cells could reduce the time needed to
develop a safe and effective way to treat MS sufferers by 10 years. [
KnoxNews, 7 July]
A doctor from Vermont, United States, will not be reprimanded by the
Medical Practice Board for removing a woman from a ventilator and
giving her a paralysing medicine after she suffered respiratory
failure. Dr Lloyd Thompson III will not be charged with manslaughter or
lose his licence to practice, a decision that has caused outrage among
euthanasia opponents. Mary Hahn Beerworth of the Vermont Right to Life
Committee said that her phone had been jammed since the decision was
publicised. "People are pretty outraged," she said. "I believe the
state just devalued that woman's life. The very least acceptable move
should have been a suspension of his licence. Instead they have invited
more abuse. It is an open invitation." However, the Death with Dignity
organisation supported Dr Thompson's actions. "He did the right thing,
with the wrong medication," said Dr Carmer Van Buren. "The fact is that
this was a dying patient, and he was doing everything he could to make
a terribly agitated patient die comfortably." However, Dr Van Buren
stated that the case did not constitute assisted suicide as the patient
did not choose to have her life ended by the doctor. [
The Nashua Telegraph, 5 July]
A bill to prevent euthanasia by denial of food and fluids has continued
its progress through the British Parliament. The Patients' Protection
Bill tabled by Baroness Knight of Collingtree was passed last Friday
without a vote at the report-stage and will be considered for a third
reading at a date to be announced. The Bill is opposed by
pro-euthanasia peer Lord Joffe, whose Patient (Assisted Dying) Bill, is
unlikely to make similar progress. [
House of Lords Hansard, 4 July]
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