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| Welcome to BioNews by email, the free weekly news digest of the top stories in assisted conception, genetics, embryo/stem cell research and related areas, published by the Progress Educational Trust. Sent to registered subscribers each week, BioNews by email is aimed at informing debate in these areas by providing balanced and timely summaries of the week's news and developments alongside comment, reviews and recommendations of selected topical conferences, events and more. It also contains job advertisements from the relevant sectors. Visit the BioNews website at www.bionews.org.uk where you can subscribe for free to receive BioNews by email in one of three formats, plus view more news, comment, reviews and job advertisements and search the full archive.
| Donor anonymity and rights |
| 23 January 2004 - by Professor Emily Jackson |
| The announcement that the government intends to remove anonymity from sperm, egg and embryo donors was framed in terms of rights: the child's right to information about her genetic origins should, it was argued, take priority over the donor's right to privacy. This appeal to rights is unsurprising. The UN...[Read More] |
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| Donor anonymity to be removed in UK |
| 21 January 2004 - by BioNews |
| The UK government has announced that people who donate eggs, sperm or embryos in the UK are to lose their right to anonymity. The change to the existing law - which currently does not allow children conceived using donor sperm to discover the identity of donors, but only to find out...[Read More] |
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| 'Need for a father' provision should be dropped |
| 21 January 2004 - by BioNews |
| Suzi Leather, chair of the UK's Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA), has stated in an interview with a national newspaper that the law requiring fertility clinics to consider a child's 'need for a father' before offering treatment is 'nonsense'. It would be better for clinics to assess women seeking...[Read More] |
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| HFE Act to be fully reviewed |
| 21 January 2004 - by BioNews |
| Public health minister, Melanie Johnson MP, has announced at the annual conference of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) that the UK government's Department of Health is to fully review the country's fertility and embryology legislation. The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act was a 'landmark' piece of legislation when...[Read More] |
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| Call for ban on 'cowboy cloners' |
| 21 January 2004 - by BioNews |
| The Royal Society (the UK's national academy of science) has called for a worldwide ban on what it calls 'cowboy cloners': scientists and groups who say they are carrying out human reproductive cloning. It has also released a set of guidelines, aimed at helping people to decide whether human cloning...[Read More] |
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| Study links IVF to birth problems |
| 26 January 2004 - by BioNews |
| Babies born following fertility treatment are more likely to be premature and to have a lower birth weight than those conceived naturally, according to a group of Dutch and Australian researchers. Their findings, published in the British Medical Journal, indicate that single IVF babies are more likely to face birth...[Read More] |
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| Call to offer amniocentesis to all women |
| 26 January 2004 - by BioNews |
| Accurate prenatal tests for Down syndrome and other chromosome disorders should be made available to all pregnant women, not just those over 35, according to a new US study. Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, evaluated the cost-effectiveness of invasive methods such as amniocentesis, and also surveyed 534...[Read More] |
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| New South Wales to 'shake up' fertility laws |
| 26 January 2004 - by BioNews |
| The state of New South Wales in Australia has also proposed to remove the anonymity of sperm and egg donors, as part of a 'major shake-up' of its legislation on assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs). Following six years of deliberation, the New South Wales health authority has introduced a draft bill...[Read More] |
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