News, 6 May 2003
Overweight and obese expectant mothers have double the chance of having
children with heart defects and double the risk of multiple birth
defects, according to the US government's Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention.
A study, described in this month's Pediatrics journal, also confirms
that maternal obesity in pregnancy increases the risk of neural tube
defects such as spina bifida.
The babies of obese women were three times more likely to suffer from
omphalocele, where abdominal organs protrude through the navel.
It is suggested that obesity could cause diabetes in women as well as
increased need for folic acid.
[
AP on CNN, 4 May]
A lawyer in Australia functioning as guardian of an unidentified
68-year-old woman with dementia is asking the supreme court to rule on
whether feeding and hydration by tube is medical treatment.
Mr Julian Gardner, a public advocate, is acting for the woman who has
Pick's disease and is kept alive in a nursing home by artificial
feeding. The case is expected to be heard in nine days' time.
Dr Mukesh Haikerwal, president of the Australian medical association's
Victoria division, says he would welcome a ruling and would support the
withdrawal of medical care. He says Victoria's law on tube feeding is
obscure.
[
Courier-Mail, 5 May]
The Canadian government has refused to publish the results of its
enquiry into the death of a woman who took part in a trial of RU-486,
the abortion drug.
The ministry concerned says that the information belongs to Dr Ellen
Wiebe of Vancouver who conducted the experiment and who promotes
RU-486.
Preliminary findings suggested that the woman died of septic shock
unconnected with the administration of the drug.
[
LifeSite, 5 May]
The Japanese government intends to spend up to 10 billion Yen a year on
fertility treatment for married couples to combat a falling birth-rate.
Couples might receive 100 thousand Yen over two years for treatments
such as in vitro fertilisation.
[
Daily Yomiuri, 6 May]
Fragments of aborted children's bones which remain in the uterus can
make mothers infertile, according to a Canadian study described in
last month's Fertility and Sterility journal.
Researchers at Ottawa university used ultrasound to find bones which
would have gone undetected by tube cameras.
When the bones were removed, the women could conceive again.
Bones are present in babies at 12 weeks' gestation.
[
LifeSite, 5 May]
The British Columbia supreme court has found a woman guilty of
assisting a suicide caused by breathing car fumes in a sealed garage.
Ms Julianna Zsiros, 39, helped Ms Linda Whetung, 50, to kill herself.
Ms Zsiros, who stood to inherit $30,000 from Ms Whetung, will be
sentenced next month and is free on bail.
The defence said Ms Whetung wanted to die because she was in great
pain.
[
Canadian Press on canada.com, 30 April]
An environmental group has suggested that chemicals from domestic
manufactured goods can adversely affect unborn children's tissue.
Greenpeace were commenting on research on dust recovered from 100
British homes by laboratories which the organisation supports at Exeter
university, England.
[
This is Exeter, 5 May]
Our source does not make clear what substances are involved but it
mentions chemicals used in making television sets, fabrics and toys,
including fire-retardants.
Women and girls, including those under the age of consent, will be
able to get abortifacient morning-after pills without a doctor's
prescription if the Saskatchewan, Canada, government succeeds in
passing legislation.
The law would come into effect towards the end of this year.
[
LifeSite, 5 May]
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