News, 2 September 2003
A pregnant mentally disabled woman who became the centre of a court
battle over disabled and foetal rights has given birth to a baby girl.
The Florida woman, known only as J. D. S, became pregnant after she was
raped at her group home and came to media attention when Governor Jeb
Bush asked the courts to appoint a guardian for her unborn child. The
request was initially unsuccessful but the governor's office is likely
to continue its push for an appeal as similar cases may arise in the
future. [
The Guardian, 31 August]
Maternity hospitals in the Republic of Ireland have warned that a
number of women have almost died travelling into the country in labour.
Over the past few months, Dublin hospitals have noted a substantial
rise in the number of women coming into Ireland to give birth, the
majority of whom are not asylum seekers. Dr Michael Geary, Master of
the Rotunda Hospital, said that all three Dublin hospitals had seen
'near mortalities' in recent months and that these women were putting
their own lives and those of their babies at risk. [
RTE News, 2 September]
Women are being warned to ensure that they are protected against
rubella before starting a family, following a Japanese study which
identified 31 cases of birth defects caused because the mother
developed the disease during the early stages of pregnancy. Most UK
women born before 1988 only received a single vaccine, rather than the
two that are now given, meaning that some women may not be fully
protected. [
BBC, 1 September] The only rubella vaccines available in the UK are produced from cell lines derived from aborted babies.[SPUC source]
A Florida man is on trial, charged with murdering his girlfriend
because she refused an abortion. Jennifer Peck was reported missing in
October 1995 and police later found her body in the boot of a car.
Police detective Greg Stout stated: "This was a poor, innocent woman
who did nothing to no one. He could have just left her... and I am sure
she'd be back in Oklahoma close to her family with a child. Her family
feels as deprived of a grandchild as they do of missing her." A 2001
study in the Journal of the American Medical Association revealed that
homicide accounts for 20% of pregnancy-related deaths. [
LifeNews.com, 2 September]
Research published in this week's issue of the British medical journal
The Lancet reveals two key discoveries in the use of adult stem cells
to treat heart damage. The researchers from Cleveland Ohio found that
the heart attempts to repair itself for several days after a heart
attack through the release of the SDF-1 molecule and that implanting
SDF-1 into the heart draws in circulating stem cells to begin repair
work. Dr Marc Penn, one of the researchers, explained: "Not only are we
replacing dead tissue with living cells, but it's making the body
regenerate itself." Reservations have been expressed about the paper
but Dr Penn believes that human trials should begin within two years. [
Aberdeen News, 29 August]
The creator of Dolly the sheep is to give a series of lectures at the
Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh, beginning with a lecture on
cloning tomorrow evening. [
Edinburgh Evening News, 1 September
A feature published by www.townhall.com looks at the growing trend
towards low birth rates in Asia, citing the below-replacement level
rates of Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Japan. The
rapidly changing demographics of these countries and the accompanying
problems of an ageing population and shrinking work force are being
attributed to dropping marriage rates, increased divorce, family
planning programs run in collaboration with International Planned
Parenthood and high abortion rates, as well as an increasingly
individualistic and commercialistic mentality among the young. [
townhall.com, 2 September]
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