News, 3 May 2004
UK doctors are fitting girls as young as 14 with contraceptive implants
that make them infertile for up to three years without parental consent
or knowledge, The Telegraph reports. Contraceptive injections are also
proving popular among under-15s. Dr Anne Szarewski of the Margaret Pyke
Centre in London said: "In a strictly religious family, parents could
not contemplate that a daughter under the age of 16 might be sexually
active. It is much easier for those women if they do not have the
contraceptive pill lying around." [
The Telegraph, 3 May]
A US Appeals Court has ruled that medical workers at a Louisiana jail
did not violate a prisoner's civil rights by preventing her from having
an abortion. The prison has a policy of requiring a court order for
elective medical procedures which the woman, identified only as
Victoria W, could have applied for. Victoria W carried the baby to term
and placed it with adoptive parents. [
The Guardian, 2 May]
Documents relating to the cleft palate abortion case now being
investigated by West Mercia police show that the baby was aborted at 28
weeks and would have had a 90% chance of survival. The abortion took
place in December 2001 at the Hereford County Hospital. The mother and
her husband were apparently informed that the condition was
correctable. Rev Joanna Jepson is taking the police to court after they
refused to pursue the matter. The police have taken up the case and
asked for the hearing, due this month, to be postponed. [
The Times of London, 2 May]
A study published in the British Medical Journal has described Uganda's
AIDS programme as 'equivalent to a highly effective vaccine'. Uganda's
AIDS rate decreased by as much as 75% after the government introduced a
programme based on abstinence and fidelity which resulted in a
reduction in sexual partners and a delaying of sexual activity. The
Cambridge researchers who produced the study said that there had to be
a 'shift in strategic thinking on health policy and HIV/AIDS' if
Uganda's success was to be replicated elsewhere. [
LifeSiteNews.com, 30 April]
Scientists have successfully re-grown teeth in mice using adult stem
cells and could eventually apply the same technique to humans, Sky News
reports. Human trials are due to begin within two years and the
procedure could be available within five years, costing the same as a
synthetic implant. [
Sky News, 3 May]
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