News, 15 October 2003
Researchers at the W. Goethe University, Frankfurt, have found that
infusing adult stem cells into the coronary arteries after a heart
attack reduces damage, Reuters reports. Dr Stefanie Dimmeler and
associates isolated stem cells from the bone marrow or blood of 28
heart attack patients and tested the technique, which caused a
significant fall in heart damage and improvements in cardiac function. [
Reuters, 13 October]
Following the announcement by Dr Panayiotis Zavos that he was close to
producing his first human clone, it has emerged that up to six Britons
have applied to him to be cloned. Dr Zavos also claimed that two women
were being assessed in a secret location with the possibility of
carrying the first cloned baby. The eventual 'winner' will be paid
between $20,000 and $30,000. The entire process has been condemned as
'tasteless' by medical colleagues, who fear for the health of a cloned
baby. [
This is London, 14 October]
Hong Kong's soaring abortion rates are being blamed on lack of parental
guidance and poor sex education, according to a report in The Standard.
The abortion rate in Hong Kong is thought to be one for every 2.4 live
births compared to the one to five births rate of Japan, with the rate
growing particularly among young women. In response, a series of
adverts featuring a pregnant boy have been commissioned to alert boys
to their responsibilities. [
The Standard, 14 October]
SPUC spokesman Gordon Kane, said: "Thirty years of increasingly
explicit sex education and access to contraception has not prevented
the UK from having one of the highest teenage pregnancy rates in the
world. What is important, however, is for young people to be made aware
of the moral gravity of abortion and its serious mental and physical
consequences." [SPUC source]
Scientists in the US have found that nearly a third of pregnancies from
frozen embryos are ectopic, The Times of London reports. The study,
conducted at Brown University and Women and Infants Hospital in
Providence, found that women who become pregnant from frozen embryos
are 17 times more likely to suffer ectopic pregnancy than IVF patients
using fresh embryos. Both types of IVF are more likely to cause ectopic
pregnancy than natural conception. Lord Winston, the UK fertility
expert, warned recently that the possible consequences of using frozen
embryos had not yet been properly assessed and that there was evidence
that freezing could alter the functioning of certain genes. [
The Times, 14 October]
SPUC has criticised the BBC for making a one-sided attack on the
Catholic Church's promotion of respect for life and responsible sexual
behaviour. In a Panorama programme entitled "Sex and the Holy City",
the BBC made unsubstantiated claims that the Church's prohibition on
abortion and contraception is responsible for the deaths of women from
unwanted pregnancies, the spread of HIV and the suffering of pregnant
child rape victims. SPUC spokesman Anthony Ozimic stated: "Many people
have already protested strongly to the BBC about the report's in-built
bias. The 'investigation' which purported to be a serious documentary
report, obviously had its anti-life 'findings' written before it
started." [SPUC press release, 13 October]
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