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Those with conditions that can usually be corrected medically - such as deformed feet and cleft lip - are instead being terminated. The number of abortions in England of Down's Syndrome babies now outstrips those who are born alive, despite the fact that those with DS can live long and fulfilling lives. "These figures are symptomatic of a eugenic trend of the consumerist society hell-bent on obliterating deformity - and at what cost to its own humanity?" asked ethicist Jacqueline Laing, of London Metropolitan University. "We are obliterating the willingness of people to accept disability. Babies are required to fit a description of normality before they are allowed to be born." "This is straightforward eugenics. The message is being sent out to disabled people that they should not have been born. It is appalling and abhorrent," said Nuala Scarisbrick. "Such statistics are an indictment of a society which places a conditional value upon its citizens, based upon how 'useful' they may prove to be in later life," notes Patrick Cusworth. [6May04, Daily Mail; Drudge Report]
 
Australia Gets Morning After Pill (1/04) PDF Print E-mail

The Australian Medical Association is calling on the Federal Health Minister to reverse a decision to make emergency contraception available over the counter in pharmacies.

The head of the AMA Ethics Committee, Doctor Rosanna Capolingua says the decision to make the drug Postinor available through pharmacies is short-sighted and trivializes women's health. Dr Capolingua says pharmacists are not the right people to be distributing the morning after pill.

"The morning after pill is something that women can access for unwanted pregnancies, and unwanted pregnancies occur in a whole range of situations. It is an issue that needs appropriate advice and certainly needs consideration of how the situation occurred and how the situation can be prevented in the future. A pharmacist is not able to provide that sort of advice over the counter in an environment where it is a shop, where the pharmacist may be male or female, may be a junior person."

Sexual health physician, Dr Stella Heley says easier access to the morning after pill could encourage unsafe sex. "People, if they have sexual contact without using a condom run the risk of becoming pregnant, run the risk also of contracting a sexually transmissable infection."

Postinor is the first over-the-counter birth control pill available in Australia and has a 95 per cent “success” rate [i.e. prevents ovulation or terminates pregnancy] if taken within 24 hours of sexual intercourse. [Radio News; http://www9.sbs.com.au/theworldnews/region.php?id=76039&region=7, 31.12.2003; N Valko RN, 1/2/04]

 
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