News, 6 June 2003
More than fifty Peers are to debate the Joffe Patient (Assisted Dying)
Bill in the House of Lords today. Lord Joffe's Private Members Bill, if
it were to come into effect, would allow a terminally or incurably ill
patient to request medical assistance to commit suicide. [
icliverpool.co.uk, 6 June]
Yesterday, a senior figure at the Royal College of Nursing voiced her
support for the bill. Karen Sanders, a nurse and lecturer who chairs
the ethics forum of the RCN, offered Lord Joffe her support in a
private capacity. "I feel strongly about voluntary euthanasia because I
believe that competent adults who have incurable or insufferable
diseases should have the right to make choices about their own lives,"
she said. [
The Guardian, 6 June]
In an open letter to Catholic peers last week, Archbishop Peter Smith
of Cardiff warned that the bill was an attack on the fundamental right
to life and would put the lives of the sick and vulnerable at risk. [
Catholic Communications Service, 25 May]
The Human Fertility and Embryology Authority has set up a system for
IVF clinics to report serious errors, the BBC reports. The HFEA has
been criticised after a series of blunders at clinics, such as the
birth of mixed-race twins to a white couple after the wrong sperm
sample was used. In response, an Incident Alert System requires clinics
to report situations such as staff errors and freezer malfunctions that
may cause harm to patients or embryos. Suzi Leather, who chairs the
HFEA, said: 'we hope that the speed of the alert system will reduce
incidents happening and all the distress that incurs.' However, experts
have said that it cannot be guaranteed that mistakes will not occur. [
BBC News, 6 June]
A study published in the British Medical Journal, has found that
pregnant women carrying male babies eat 10% more calories than women
carrying girls. Researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health in
Boston, USA and the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, studied
the dietary intake of 244 pregnant women to determine why boys are born
larger than girls. The findings suggest that testosterone secretions
from the male fetus may trigger an increase in the mother's appetite.
The research may also help to explain food cravings during pregnancy
and the relationship between growth in the womb and the risk of certain
illnesses in adult life. [
The Herald, 6 June]
The body of an unborn baby boy of six months' gestation has been found
in a sewage treatment plant in Northeast Pennsylvania, NEPA news
reports. It was not clear whether the body was dumped at the plant or
flushed down a toilet, or whether the baby died as a result of
miscarriage or abortion. Investigators are awaiting the results of an
autopsy before proceeding. [
NEPA News, 5 June]
Canadian MP Svend Robinson has introduced a motion promoting abortion
throughout the country. The motion calls for the introduction of
abortion services in all provinces and territories and an increase in
the proportion of hospitals providing abortion. Canada already has
liberal abortion laws and approximately 115,000 abortions are performed
annually. [
LifeSite Daily News, 5 June]
More than one quarter of women smoke during pregnancy, according to a
report in The Scotsman, with a similar percentage exceeding suggested
alcohol limits and binge drinking. Tanith Muller, of ASH Scotland, an
anti-tobacco organisation, expressed concern about the figures. She
said: "we need to look at what support these women are given and make
sure that they have access to information warning them of the benefits
of quitting smoking during pregnancy, which include reducing the risks
of cot death, making sure that their babies are fully developed and
preventing miscarriages." [
The Scotsman, 6 June]
An article published in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons
has criticised scientific and medical bias over the alleged link
between abortion and breast cancer. In her article, entitled "The
Abortion-Breast Cancer Link: How Politics Trumped Science and Informed
Consent", the president of the Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer,
Karen Malec, discusses the evidence for a link, media bias in the
coverage of the debate and the opposition of pro-abortion politicians
and organisations. [
LifeSite Daily News, 5 June]
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