Morning-after pills, which may cause early abortions, are to be made available free of charge in pharmacies in Wales. The move will be funded by the national health service (NHS). A health minister said that the move would complement the Welsh Assembly government's sexual health plan. [Wales Online, 13 November] http://bit.ly/bfC5Y9
Other stories:
UK survey of women about abortion and promiscuity [Daily Mail, 16 November] http://bit.ly/cNoJ71
Woman speaks of decision to abort terminally-ill unborn boy [Daily Mail, 13 November] http://bit.ly/d1SVHx
Disabled man overcame locked-in syndrome with help of stem cells [Daily Mail, 16 November] http://bit.ly/bocHK5
World's oldest mother wants child [Daily Mail, 14 November] http://bit.ly/c22hyN
NHS Surrey stops funding new IVF courses [BBC, 12 November] http://bbc.in/9aRr2S Also in Essex [Yellow Advertiser, 11 November] http://bit.ly/dpDLuu
Baby saved by cord blood transplant [Evening Standard, 11 November] http://bit.ly/cvBP9K
IVF part of the holocaust of abortion, says Argentinean archbishop [CNA, 10 November] http://bit.ly/9aXuEI
Columnist says death panels needed to fix economy [LifeNews.com, 15 November] http://bit.ly/bKCAuG
Euthanasia lobby reaction to Inglis’ sentence reveals agenda says doctor [Peter Saunders, 13 November]
New findings into extent of neglect of elderly in NHS hospitals [Daily Mail, 11 November] http://bit.ly/axngRG Another report: Daughter claims mother was starved to death [Guardian, 11 November] http://bit.ly/9iNH82
Japanese man streams suicide live on the internet [Telegraph, 11 November] http://bit.ly/bWhX6q
Former US president Bill Clinton says large Philippines population is good for economic growth [Catholic Culture, 15 November] http://bit.ly/9wQvBZ