News, 28 October 2003
A US couple who wanted to be one of the first to have a cloned baby,
have almost given up after receiving a letter from Dr Panos Zavos
requesting $80,000 to fund their cloning treatment. Kathy and Bill,
whose surname was not divulged on their request, claim that they were
led to believe that cloning a human being would be about as expensive
as IVF and that they would receive a "significant reduction" if they
talked to the media. They turned to Dr Zavos after numerous failed IVF
treatment cycles because they could not face being childless. Kathy
said that Dr Zavos told them that a news organisation would provide the
money for them but they have heard nothing further. "This has gone on
for a long time now," she admitted. "I have lost confidence in this. It
is just my feeling, I just don't think it is ever going to happen." [
Sunday Herald, 26 October]
Over 500 international scientists have gathered in Singapore for what
is thought to be the world's largest meeting on stem cell research. The
three-day International Stem Cell Conference will address biological,
clinical and ethical issues surrounding stem cell research. [
Freeserve News, 28 October]
Researchers at Harvard University have used stem cells from a mouse
embryo to create inner ear 'hair' cells, the BBC reports. Hair cells,
which turn sound vibrations into nerve signals, are often depleted
irreversibly in old age, causing hearing loss in four out of five
people over 65. However, Professor Tony Holley of Sheffield University,
stated that possible treatment was many years off as transplanting new
hair cells into the ear would prove extremely difficult to achieve. [
BBC, 28 October]
One of Spain's autonomous regions, Andalucia, has clashed with the
national government after it announced plans to exploit a possible
loophole in the law to set up an embryonic stem cell bank. The Spanish
national healthy ministry is challenging the plan as it could violate
Spanish national law and are expected by senior researchers to be
successful. [
The Scientist, 27 October]
The head of the delegation of the Holy See to the UN, Archbishop
Celestino Migliore, has addressed the UN on the subject of human
cloning, Vatican News reports. In his address, Archbishop Migliore
summarised many of the arguments used for and against a UN ban on human
cloning and stressed the basic scientific and humanitarian principles
against all forms of human cloning. [
Vatican News, 27 October]
The husband of Terri Schiavo has appeared on CNN's 'Larry King Live' to
justify his determination to end his wife's life, The Guardian reports.
During the interview, Michael Schiavo claimed that Terri had expressed
a wish not to be kept alive artificially before her collapse in 1990
and that he was determined to fulfil her wish 'if this is the last
thing I can do for Terri.' He denied preventing Terri from receiving
therapy and dismissed criticism that he had abandoned her for another
woman, stating: "I'm fortunate to have two women in my life that I love
very much." The attorney working for Terri Schiavo's parents responded:
"It's hard to know what to believe with him because he says whatever
the occasion demands or what is in his financial interests." [
The Guardian, 28 October]
The affidavit of a nurse who cared for Terri Schiavo states clearly
that Michael Schiavo denied Terri even the most basic therapy whilst
she was in her care, that Mr Schiavo became visibly excited when she
appeared to be dying and that her medical notes were repeatedly
interfered with. Carla Sauer Iyer also affirmed that Terri was 'alert
and orientated' when she nursed her, communicating through sounds,
gestures and expressions of emotion. [
Terrisfight.org]
Fears have been expressed that a psychopath who murdered his baby
daughters could have fathered hundreds of children through sperm
donations, Metro reports. Heine Nielsen, who is now serving life
imprisonment, is thought to have made 520 donations to a Danish sperm
bank which supplies 40 countries. One expert urged women who believed
themselves to be pregnant with his children to have abortions in case
they had Nielsen's genes. [Metro, 27 October]
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