News, 7 May 2004
The US Food and Drug Administration has decided against allowing the
morning after pill to be sold over the counter, Ample reports. Critics
have accused the FDA of being swayed by political pressure but the FDA
said that there was not enough evidence presented to conclude that
young women could use the Plan B pill safely. [
www.iii.co.uk, 7 May]
A Florida court has overturned 'Terri's law', which allowed Governor
Jeb Bush to order the reinsertion of Terri Schiavo's feeding tube,
Reuters reports. Terri Schiavo, who has been in a coma-like state since
her mysterious collapse in 1990, is at the centre of a bitter legal
dispute between her husband, who claims she would not want to be kept
alive in such a condition, and her parents, who believe she should be
given food and fluids and that her condition could improve with
therapy. It is not yet clear whether the feeding tube will be removed
once again. [
Reuters, 6 May]
A report in Medical News Today has expressed doubt over whether there
is any evidence that adult stem cells can be used to form other cells.
The article comes after a number of studies purported to provide
conclusive evidence that blood stem cells cannot be used to create new
heart muscle cells. [
Medical News Today, 7 May]
Parents, teachers and a number of c-list celebrities celebrated the
return of a teenage 'sexual health' bus to Enfield, UK, last weekend.
The 4YP bus offers information and advice on sex to 11-18 year-olds as
part of a local strategy to reduce teenage pregnancies. [
Enfield and Haringey Independent, 6 May]
Spain's new socialist government has dropped lawsuits over an
Andalusian stem cell bank, which the previous government had said was
unconstitutional. The legal battle began after the Spanish Parliament
approved a law which allowed research on 'spare' IVF embryos and which
contemplated the establishment of an embryonic stem cell bank. When the
Andalusian state government approved its own law and the creation of
its own bank, the central government filed a lawsuit in the
Constitutional Court. Jesus Avila, director of the Madrid molecular
biology centre, said he hoped the change would mean that "the
scientific features will be discussed in a scientific rather than in a
political environment, where the scientists will discuss on facts but
not on political thoughts." [
Biomedcentral.com, 6 May]
A pro-life crisis pregnancy centre in Pennsylvania has just celebrated
receiving its 10,000th call, Lifenews.com. The government-funded
programme Real Alternatives offers telephone counselling followed by
counselling in the woman's local area throughout the pregnancy and for
a year afterwards. Over 85,000 women have been helped by the
Pennsylvania programme since 1995 and led officials in other states to
consider similar programmes. [
Lifenews.com, 6 May]
A woman has appealed to the US Supreme Court after losing her case
against an abortionist she claims subjected her to a forced abortion.
The woman, known as Jane Roe II, claims that a doctor had her
restrained during an unsuccessful abortion, even though she demanded
repeatedly that he stop and allow her to leave. He allegedly had her
held down whilst he completed the abortion, perforated her uterus and
removed part of her intestines. Jean Sapp, director of the Counsellor
Corps, described forced and non-consensual abortion as "our country's
blackest unspoken secret." [
LifeSiteNews, 6 May]
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