News, 3 November 2003
A study published in the journal Human Reproduction suggests that women
who donate their eggs in exchange for cut-price IVF treatment are not
at risk of added side effects. At the hospital where the study was
conducted, couples pay £3,000 for an IVF treatment cycle, but only £500
if they agree to share the woman's eggs. 45 of the 95 fertility clinics
in the UK operate egg-sharing schemes. [
BBC, 3 November]
Anthony Ozimic, SPUC's political secretary, commented: "Regardless of
the pregnancy success rates associated with egg sharing, egg sharing
should be illegal, because such barter is simply a devious way of
evading the legal ban on the sale of gametes."
The number of caesarean sections carried out in Ireland has
trebled in 20 years, according to new figures. In 1982 6.2% births were
caesarean, compared with 20% in 1999. The survey also found that women
who have undergone a c-section are more willing to repeat the procedure
and some 8% of mothers choose it simply to avoid labour pain. [
Breaking News, 2 November]
USAID's 'family planning' programmes in Egypt have been criticised by
leftwing and Islamic MPs, who have accused America of having a
political interest in reducing the birth rate of Egyptians. However,
President Mubarak has warned of the dangers of a 'population explosion'
and the Egyptian birth rate has been brought down from 5.3 to 3.5 in 20
years. USAID has spent some $200 million in Egypt in 25 years. [
Al Ahram Weekly, 2 November]
New research into the government's health policy has found that STI
rates among teenagers increase in areas with greater access to family
planning clinics. Dr David Paton of Nottingham University, stated: "We
are pretty sure, statistically, that the increase in clinic sessions
was associated with an increase in diagnosis rates. Sexually
transmitted infection diagnoses increased by about 15% between 1999 and
2001 - one tenth of this was due to clinics." The findings are to be
presented at a House of Commons meeting later this month, which will
also look at the success of the HIV prevention campaign in Uganda,
where people have been encouraged to adopt more responsible sexual
behaviour. The FPA have disputed Dr Paton's findings. [
The Sunday Herald, 2 November]
A Cambridge student has asked the high court to determine whether
doctors acted unlawfully when they performed a late term abortion on a
baby with cleft palate. UK law permits abortion after 24 weeks in cases
of 'serious handicap', a term that Joanna Jepson wants the courts to
clarify after police refused Ms Jepson's request to investigate the
doctor concerned on allegations of unlawful killing. [
The Sunday Herald, 2 November]
Alison Davis of No Less Human commented: "Joanna Jepson's concern is
understandable, but it is unfortunate that this case seems to hang on
the assertion that cleft lip and palate cannot be regarded as a
"serious handicap". Aborting any baby is wrong, regardless of any
disabling condition. Every baby has infinite value, and no deliberate
killing of an unborn child is ever justified."
Three pro-abortion groups have filed lawsuits in an attempt to
stop the partial birth abortion ban becoming law, BBC reports.
President Bush is expected to sign the bill on Wednesday which abortion
advocates claim is dangerous and could lead to other procedures being
outlawed. Supporters of the bill point out that partial birth abortion
is barbaric and unnecessary. [
BBC, 1 November]
The creators of Dolly the sheep have said that the problems surrounding
cloning need to be identified and understood before 'therapeutic'
cloning can be contemplated. In spite of highly publicised cases of
cloned mammals being successfully created, the vast majority of cloned
mammalian embryos die before birth and survivors often suffer from a
variety of life-threatening conditions, meaning that cloning still
poses serious risks if used to treat humans. [
New Scientist, 31 October]
An overhaul of intra-country adoption could reduce the costs and
waiting times involved for couples seeking to adopt children from
abroad, The Telegraph reports. The UK minister for children has said
that her officials are currently in talks with countries such as China,
India and Guatemala with the possibility of removing embassy
involvement in the process. "This is hugely time-saving," said a
spokesman for the Department of Education and Skills, "because it
prevents bundles of paper going back and forwards between us, agencies,
embassies and government departments here and abroad." [
The Telegraph, 3 November]
UK government statistics for 2002 have shown a drop in the number of
Irish women seeking abortion in Britain, Irish Examiner reports. The
Irish Family Planning Association welcomed the drop but claimed that
the introduction of the Euro may have led Irish women to seek abortion
in other European countries. [
Irish Examiner, 31 October]
Pat Buckley of European Life Network, stated: "Any drop in the numbers
is welcome. The fact that around 6500 women abort their babies each
year is a national disaster. Successive governments have either ignored
the issue or dealt with it in an inadequate manner."
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