News, 26 March 2003
The results of a survey released today by the official statistics
agency in England and Wales indicates that 7% of female respondents
aged 16-49 had used the abortifacient morning pill in the preceding 12
months. The results, contained in a report issued by the Office for
National Statistics and based on a survey conducted by the Department
of Health in 2001/02, also indicated that 21% of women aged 18-19 had
used the drug. In 2001/02, 43% of all women who used the morning-after
pill obtained it from their own general practitioner or practice nurse,
while 31% obtained it from a family planning clinic and 20% from a
pharmacy. [
ONS, 26 March]
About a million packs of the abortifacient morning-after pill are now
provided each year in the UK, resulting in tens of thousands of early
abortions.
It is reported that China has banned sex-selective abortion. A
regulation issued jointly by the State Commission for Population and
Family Planning, the Ministry of Health and the State Food and Drug
Administration prohibits the use of ultrasound scans to determine an
unborn child's sex and bans doctors who carry our routine tests from
divulging an unborn child's sex to the parents. While broad guidelines
prohibiting sex selection already exist in China, the new regulation is
thought to be the first attempt to ban the practice by law. [South
China Morning Post, 25 March] China's one-child policy and a cultural
preference for boys have led to widespread sex-selective abortion and
infanticide across China, resulting in a seriously unbalanced male to
female ratio.
The Australian federal government is planning to amend a
regulation banning the export of human embryos to allow women to take
their own IVF embryos out of the country. Faced with the possibility
that the Senate might throw out the entire regulation, the customs
minister acknowledged that "unexpected and complex issues" had been
raised and said that the government was considering amendments to allow
couples to export their own embryos for purposes connected with IVF
treatment, such as finding a suitable surrogate mother overseas. The
regulation, which came into force last month, decreed that exports of
human embryos were "prohibited absolutely", but critics claimed that
such a blanket ban was too restrictive and could even prevent pregnant
women from leaving the country. [
Sydney Morning Herald, 26 March]
Pro-life legislation forms a major plank of a comprehensive legislative
programme recommended by the US Conference of Catholic Bishops. The
bishops' proposals for the 108th Congress are divided into seven
categories, one of which is dedicated to pro-life legislation and
includes measures to reclassify certain "contraceptives" as
abortifacients, ban partial-birth abortion and human cloning for all
purposes, maintain bans on federal funding of abortion providers and
embryo research, and improve palliative care for the terminally ill.
While the proposals are limited to what is feasible at the moment, the
preamble to the pro-life section of the bishops' document declares that
the Church still seeks to eliminate all legalised abortion, ultimately
through a constitutional amendment. [USCCB, 24 March:
Introduction &
pro-life proposals]
A committee of state senators in Maryland has thrown out a bill to
allow the sale of morning-after pills from pharmacists without a
doctor's prescription. The Senate's Education, Health and Environmental
Affairs Committee rejected the measure by 6 votes to 5 after the House
of Delegates had approved it. [
The Baltimore Sun, 26 March]
Meanwhile, on another life-related matter, the governor of Arkansas has
signed a comprehensive ban on human cloning into law after it received
the overwhelming support of both houses of the state's legislature. [
LifeSite, 25 March]
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