News, 19 June 2003
A child has been born after being selected at embryo stage for his
suitability to provide tissue to treat his four-year-old brother.
Jamie Whitaker's British parents went to Chicago for the procedure
because it was not allowed in Britain.
Charlie, Jamie's brother, has the rare diamond blackfan anaemia.
Reports differ on the possible outcome and treatment of the condition,
some saying that tissue-based therapy is essential for survival while
others state that Charlie is being kept alive with five injections per
week.
John Smeaton, SPUC's national director, said: "While our hearts go out
to everybody involved, and we welcome Jamie's birth, there are profound
issues of concern here. Human beings who were not the perfect match
were simply discarded and a child has been created with the primary
purpose of benefiting his elder brother. This does not conform to
Jamie's human dignity. Mrs Whitaker said that, as she held her new
baby, she was holding UK history. What matters, though, is that he is a
human with a right to live - a right denied to his embryonic brothers
and sisters. Indeed, what happened to his unwanted embryonic siblings?
Were they flushed down the sink? Frozen? Used for experiments?"
The child was born in south Yorkshire on Monday.
[
Ananova,
BBC
and Daily Mail, 19 June]
Dr Evan Harris, a Liberal Democrat MP, has called for parliament to
amend the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act to allow treatment
such as that which the Whitakers got in America.
[
ic Croydon, 19 June]
In April, the English appeal court ruled that the Human Fertilisation
and Embryology Authority could authorise the creation of so-called
designer babies to serve as tissue donors for sick older siblings.
The judgement allowed the Hashmi family of Leeds to create a number of
IVF embryos and then use pre-implantation genetic diagnosis to select
those who would be able to provide a bone marrow transplant for their
son who has thalassaemia.
[
SPUC, 8 April]
MPs want to reduce the number of caesarian sections in Britain.
The House of Commons health committee says that women should not be
able to choose the procedure and that medical staff should only provide
it for medical or psychological reasons.
In Britain, one birth in four is by caesarian section but the World
Health Organisation recommends just one in 10.
[
BBC, 18 June]
A condition which can stop embryos implanting in the womb could one day
be treated, according to research by the US National Institutes of
Health.
Endometriosis causes tissue which normally lines the womb to grow in
other parts of the abdomen and can make the womb hostile to
recently-conceived embryos.
The study found that women with the condition lacked an enzyme which
helped L-selectin molecules to adhere to the uterus and thus enable
implantation.
As many as 15% of women of reproductive age are affected by
endometriosis.
[
HMG on Discovery Health, 18 June]
r Michael Wilks, the chairman of the British Medical Association's
ethics committee, is standing for chairmanship of the association's
council.
[
Hospital Doctor, 19 June]
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