Scientists and practitioners from around the world have been attending the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology's annual meeting in Barcelona, Spain, where proceedings conclude today. A Danish study of several thousand IVF children which was described to the meeting suggests that frozen embryos have a greater likelihood of higher birth weight, and a lesser likelihood of developmental anomalies and multiple pregnancies, than fresh embryos. [Telegraph, 8 July] Practitioners addressing the conference want to test an IVF technique which costs less than $200 on women in Africa. Baths might be employed instead of incubators, and cheap catheters, drugs and needles used. [AP on KTVP, 7 July] A new, quick test will improve IVF success rates, claim Yale University, Connecticut, scientists speaking in Barcelona. They shone infra-red light through the medium in which each of 1,000 embryos had been cultured, and found that certain factors indicated a greater likelihood of implantation. [Guardian, 9 July] SPUC's basic objection to IVF is that it amounts to the manufacture of human beings. The practice of IVF assumes that our offspring may be produced in the laboratory, and that the role of the natural mother, in safeguarding with her own body the welfare of the embryo from conception, may legitimately be transferred to other people. IVF thus makes embryos vulnerable, exposing them to the risks of being discarded, frozen or experimented upon. Many thousands of human embryos have perished in the development and practice of IVF.
A religious brother in the US has described his experience and insights gained from caring for a
brain-damaged member of his community for over 12 years. Brother Paul
O'Donnell rejected both medical and church authorities' advice that he
should allow Brother Michael to be dehydrated and starved to death. John Smeaton is blogging on it. [SPUC director, 9 July]
The Planned Parenthood Action Fund has endorsed Senator Barack Obama for US president, praising his record on abortion. He told the organisation he would ensure women's access to abortion and thanked them for their support. Our source calls Planned Parenthood the country's largest abortion business. [LifeNews, 8 July]
The head of the German coalition government has reportedly expressed her opposition to assisted suicide, after a former provincial justice minister appears to have provided a woman with poison yet escaped prosecution by leaving her to take it alone. The Christian democrat party, which is led by Mrs Angela Merkel, federal chancellor, is expected to introduce a measure this week to outlaw assisted suicide. Ms Ulla Schmidt, health minister from the social democrat party, said: "The correct path is to offer assistance to those who are dying instead of helping those free from terminal illness to commit suicide." Mr Roger Kusch, formerly a Christian democrat, is supposed to have helped a non-dying, 79-year-old Würzburg woman kill herself. [LifeSiteNews, 8 July]
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