News, weekly update, 24 to 28 November
The British Pregnancy Advisory Service
(BPAS), Britain's
largest private abortion provider, has said that nurses should be allowed to
give the abortion pill to women without the consent of doctors. Ann Furedi, chief executive of BPAS, said: "We
would like to see the restriction removed that means by law women can only have
an abortion if two doctors approve ... ". She claimed this requirement was arcane,
and that nurses should assess and provide the abortion pill. A MORI poll found
that 59% of people favoured abortion on demand and 27% disagreed, compared with
64% and 25% in 1997. Ms Furedi noted
that abortion had become a back-up to contraception which has failed in about
40% of women seeking abortion. [
The Guardian
28 November] Paul Tully, SPUC
general secretary, responded in a press release, noting that, in another recent
poll, just under 90% of women wanted women to be offered advice about alternatives
to abortion such as adoption services and 87% wanted the government to fund
organisations providing alternatives to abortion. [
SPUC source 27
November] Julia Millington of the
Pro-Life Alliance said: "While some women do find themselves in difficult
situations and need proper help and support, the vast majority of abortions are
not performed due to any grave or permanent health risk." [
BBC News 28 November]
An American study on unsafe abortion has
used flawed data to promote abortion in developing countries, according to SPUC. A team of researchers
from the Guttmacher Institute in New York, led by Dr Shusheela
Singh, has claimed that unsafe abortions in the developing world cause the
deaths of 68,000 women a year. [
BBC News, 24 November]
Paul Tully, SPUC general secretary, commented: "The author of this story
works for one of the most wealthy and politically powerful pro-abortion lobby
groups in the world. The
"research" was funded by the Hewlett Foundation, a notoriously
pro-abortion body. Reports of the study claim that Dr Singh found out about the
rate of admission to hospital following complications from unsafe abortion.
This is not what she did. Dr Singh's "findings" were not factual data
established by research, but guesses extrapolated from estimates. The burden of
the study is clearly to promote the killing of more unborn babies in poorer
countries, regardless of the fact that women do not want abortions." [
SPUC, 23 November]
Easy access to the morning-after pill does
not reduce pregnancy rates, according to a study in America.
Researchers in North Carolina carried out a trial on 1,493 sexually active women, half of whom
were given free packages of the Plan B pill, and half of whom were not. They
found at the end of 12 months that there was no significant difference in
pregnancy rates in the two groups. In the group who had increased access to the
birth control, the incidence of pregnancy per 100 person-years was 9.9 and in
the control group it was 10.5. Dr Elizabeth G Raymond, from Family Health
International in Research Triangle Park, and fellow researchers, originally thought that making access to the
pill as easy as possible would result in fewer pregnancies. They concluded that
the method of easy access to the morning after pill "would probably not be
feasible for widespread, long-term use outside a study." [Reuters,
23 November]
The Catholic Church in Scotland has criticised the
promotion of egg freezing for women who wish to postpone motherhood to further
their careers. The Glasgow Centre for Reproductive Medicine is promoting the
service, which may cost around £3,100. Simon Dames, a spokesman for the Catholic
Church in Scotland
commented: "Putting careers before family is upside-down thinking. Money
doesn't come before any relationship, especially family. In that sense,
freezing eggs is a non-starter." [The Scottish Herald, 25
November]
A new system has been launched in the UK to
help doctors to locate the nearest available hospital place for ill newborn
babies. Some three babies a day are transferred, sometimes
hundreds of miles, because of staff and cot shortages. The National Neonatal
Cot Locator should provide doctors with accurate information on cot
availability. [BBC, 27
November]
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