The Royal College of Nursing has published on its website an official response to the Science and Technology Committee's report which concurs with all its main recommendations. The RCN states "There is no other medical or surgical procedure which requires the consent of a medical practitioner or the signature of two doctors before it is carried out." [Royal College of Nursing, 31 October] Comment: "The RCN has been criticised for failing to consult widely with its members before promoting nurses as abortion practitioners. The latest statement seems absurd in its implication that doctors have no say in what medical treatment their patients receive."
Pope Benedict's prayer-intention for this month is "That those dedicated to medical research and all those engaged in legislative activity may always have deep respect for human life, from its beginning to its natural conclusion." [LifeSite, 31 October] Some Italian politicians have criticised the Pope's recent public statement that pharmacists should have the right of conscientious objection to dispensing abortifacient drugs. Ms Livia Turco, health minister, said: "I don't think his warning to pharmacists to be conscientious objectors to the morning after pill should be taken into consideration." Ms Lidia Menapace, a communist senator, said: "The Pope's appeal to pharmacists to refuse to sell the morning after pill is a very heavy interference in politics and Italian life". [LifeSite, 31 October]
The Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute has pointed out that UN agencies calling for a "right to abortion" base their arguments on maternal death statistics which they themselves admit are either lacking or unreliable. A 2005 report on maternal mortality by UNICEF, WHO, UNFPA and the World Bank said there was a lack of reliable data from developing countries. Yet 99% of the maternal deaths they estimate are said to occur in such countries. Dr Joseph Chamie, former head of the UN statistics divisions said the figures can't be proved. UNICEF, WHO and UNFPA were involved in the recent Women Deliver conference which called for a global right to abortion in order to achieve the Millennium Development Goals target for reducing maternal mortality. [Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute, 1 November]
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