Category Archives: Embryology

Annual Ag Fair was a success – Bureau County Republican

In an effort to demonstrate to all the fourth-graders in Bureau County the importance of agriculture in their lives, the Bureau County Farm Bureau Womens Committee held its 23rd annual Ag Fair on March 23.

The Ag Fair is a day-long event at the Bureau County Fairgrounds in which students make timed stops (9 minutes at each station) to 14 different stations.

These stations range from dairy, embryology, safety, pork, corn, seed science, conservation, beef, soybeans, wheat, technology, equipment, large animals and small animals.

The Farm Bureau Womens Committee and the Bureau County Ag Coalition Committee originally started Ag Fair.

The Ag Coalition Committee consists of a member from each participating Ag Fair station.

This committee was originally formed to develop and oversee the goals set for the Ag Fair.

Over time, the Ag Coalition Committee has handed the organizing process over to the Womens Committee, where the chair and co-chair persons take the lead on final decision-making.

The Ag Coalition members then handle the planning of their individual presentations.

Each year the Ag Fair is evaluated.

Any considerations for changes come through observation of the event, teachers input from evaluation sheets and suggestions made by volunteers.

The committee begins the planning process about five months in advance of the Ag Fair each year.

The committee works with local businesses, farmers, county commodity groups, U of I Extension, the local FS and SWCD, as well as state commodity groups to make presentations at each station.

Volunteers are recruited, a total of 75, to serve as presenters, leaders of the classes, time keepers, bus directors, goodie bag distributors and several other jobs including set-up and clean-up workers.

The day prior to the fair, the presenters take time to set up their displays, and the set-up crew puts up tables, chairs and partitions at each station.

The day of the fair coffee, juice, doughnuts and lunch are served to all the presenters and volunteers.

Following the Ag Fair, each student was given a bag of goodies the committee put together which contains items donated by each of the presenters from coloring books to balloons and pencils.

The teachers were given an evaluation that will assist not only the committee, but also the presenters next year.

As a follow up, the committee is sponsoring a thank you card drive for all the volunteers for the event.

Students are encouraged to draw about their favorite part of the educational event.

A teacher attending past Ag Fair best sums up the event, Ag Fair is the best-kept secret in Bureau County.

This year more than 375 students from 20 classrooms attended the Ag Fair.

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Annual Ag Fair was a success - Bureau County Republican

Embryology program training for teachers is April 18 – By Haywood … – The Mountaineer

By Haywood County Cooperative Extension | Mar 31, 2017

Haywood County 4-H will host the 4-H School Enrichment Embryology program training at 4 p.m. Tuesday, April 18, at the Haywood County Cooperative Extension Center, 589 Raccoon Road, Waynesville.

In the program, students incubate chicken eggs for 21 days and then watch baby chicks hatch. Students care for the chicks several days before the chicks are returned to a local farmer.

The curriculum training is a free opportunity open to teachers from public, private and homeschool groups. The teacher training will walk teachers through using the kits and curriculum developed by North Carolina State University.

The curriculum was developed to match the second grade Common Core and essential standards, learning about the life cycle of animals. The Embryology School Enrichment and teacher training can be used as continuing education units.

The 4-H school enrichment programs are offered at no-cost to teachers. 4-H school enrichment programs add a learn by doing experimental learning element to classrooms in Haywood County.

Call the Extension Center at 456-3575 to sign-up in advance.

The 4-H program is the youth education program of North Carolina Cooperative Extension, based at North Carolina State and North Carolina A&T State universities. More than 218,000 young people between the ages of 5 and 19 participate in North Carolina 4-H activities. 4-H is a community of young people across America who are developing leadership, citizenship, public speaking, decision-making, and life skills. 4-H is about having fun, learning, exploring and discovering. In 4-H, young people make new friends, develop new skills, become leaders and help shape their communities. Haywood County 4-H has numerous special interest programs, school enrichment programs, day camps, 4-H clubs, and opportunities for youth to learn while doing. For more information on the 4-H program in Haywood County please contact the Extension Center at 456-3575.

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Embryology program training for teachers is April 18 - By Haywood ... - The Mountaineer

Lab report – Prospect

Lisa Jardine is the right woman for the HFEA. Pfizer fails to rewrite the rules of science. And sentimentality has deprived Nasa of a highly capable head of science by Philip Ball / May 24, 2008 / Leave a comment Published in May 2008 issue of Prospect Magazine

Can Lisa Jardine save embryology?

Historian Lisa Jardine, the new head of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA), begins her role ahead of the impending Commons vote on the human fertilisation and embryology bill. The bill crystallises several moral dilemmas about research and practice in these areas, and threatens to intensify the polarisation they induce. Whatever position Jardine takes is sure to upset some vocal group or other.

This is why the appointment of someone used to taking the long view, and accustomed to the hard knocks of public life, probably makes sense. Certainly, Jardines popularising instincts seem right for the HFEA just now: she considers public education about fertility issues as important as the regulatory responsibilities. The HFEA has hitherto seldom shown an explicit commitment to inform.

So far, the misinformation about the bill spread by Catholic officials and other religious groupstalk of animal-human cybrid embryos in research as of Frankenstein proportiondoes not seem to have dented public appreciation of the potential benefits of such research. (The animal component would be a mere shell for human genes.) But it is never a good idea to underestimate the determination of zealots.

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Lab report - Prospect

B v B (Fertility Treatment – Paperwork Error) [2017] EWHC 599 (Fam) – Family Law Week

Home > Judgments

Case summary coming soon

Neutral Citation Number: [2017] EWHC 599 (Fam)Date: 23 March 2017

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE FAMILY DIVISION

THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE PETER JACKSON - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

BETWEEN:

B Applicant - and B and LEEDS TEACHING HOSPITALS NHS TRUSTRespondents B v B (Fertility Treatment: Paperwork Error) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Mr Karl Rowley QC (instructed by Harrison Drury & Co) appeared on behalf of the Applicant The First Respondent attended in person David Birch (Capsticks) appeared on behalf of the Second Respondent - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - This judgment may be published provided the individuals concerned are not identified.

Failure to comply with this condition may be a contempt of court. J U D G M E N T Mr Justice Peter Jackson: 1.This is an application for a declaration of parentage under s.55A Family Law Act 1986. It is in effect made by a married couple, although he is formally the applicant and the other the first respondent, who seek an order regularising the legal position of the father in relation to a child born to a mother in 2012. The birth was the result of fertility treatment carried out at the Leeds Centre for Reproductive Medicine at Seacroft Hospital, part of the Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust.

2.The case is yet another where paperwork errors have had potentially serious legal consequences, another case where (to quote the President of the Family Division) medical brilliance has been allied with administrative incompetence. However, the couple has nothing but praise for the medical treatment they received, leading to the birth of a much-loved child. The Trust, for its part, has explained what went wrong, done everything it can to remedy matters for this family, taken steps to improve its procedures, offered an unreserved apology, and agreed to pay the legal costs.

3.The history, which I need only set out in outline, is set out in the applicant's statement and the statement of Karen Thompson, the lead embryologist and the Trust's 'person responsible' under the legislation.

4.In 2005, the couple (I will call him X and her Y), who were then engaged to be married, approached the Trust for fertility treatment. They underwent counselling and two unsuccessful treatment cycles in March and October 2006. Further treatment cycles (now with donor embryos) occurred in September 2009, March 2010, June 2010, November 2010 and September 2011, and the final one led to the child's birth.

5.The birth was registered, with both parents being named on the birth certificate. Thereafter, in September 2012, the parents married.

6.Following decisions of Cobb J ([2013] EWHC 1418 (Fam)) and Theis J ([2015] EWFC 13), the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) directed licensed clinics to audit their paperwork between 2009 and 2014. This clinic's audit covered 36 cases of children born to couples who were not married or in a civil partnership. In two cases, of which this is one, there were no HFEA consent forms (Forms WP and PP), and in one case one form was incomplete.

7.In May 2014, the Trust, no doubt aware of its error, asked the couple to sign forms WP and PP, which they did. Even then, the forms are now missing from the Trust's records. They could in any case have no independent effect as they date from after the treatment.

8.In February 2015, the Trust finally informed the couple of the problem, and in December 2016 these proceedings were issued.

The agreed fatherhood conditions 9.The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 came into effect on 5 April 2009. From that date the non-birth partner in a couple who were not married or in a civil partnership will only be recognised as the legal parent of a child born of licensed fertility treatment using donor gametes in the UK if the 'agreed fatherhood conditions' are fulfilled.

10.Y is in law the child's mother: s.33 HFE Act 2008. Had the couple been married at the time of the treatment, X would automatically be the father: s.35.

11.As they were not married at the time of treatment, s.36 makes X (and no other person: s.38) the father if, but only if, the agreed fatherhood conditions in s.37 are satisfied at the time of the treatment.

12.Section 37 reads, so far as relevant:

37The agreed fatherhood conditions (1)The agreed fatherhood conditions referred to in section 36(b) are met in relation to a man ("M") in relation to treatment provided to W under a licence if, but only if,

(a)M has given the person responsible a notice stating that he consents to being treated as the father of any child resulting from treatment provided to W under the licence,

(b)W has given the person responsible a notice stating that she consents to M being so treated,

(c)neither M nor W has, since giving notice under paragraph (a) or (b), given the person responsible notice of the withdrawal of M's or W's consent to M being so treated,

(d)

(e)

(2)A notice under subsection (1)(a), (b) or (c) must be in writing and must be signed by the person giving it.

(3)

13.Thus, to satisfy the agreed fatherhood conditions, what is required is that

X must have given notice

In advance

In writing and signed

Stating that he consented to being treated as the father of any child

Resulting from the treatment undergone by Y

Under the clinic's licence

And Y must have given notice in the same manner.

The form of consent14.The HFEA is the body responsible for granting licences for treatment. Licences are subject to a range of mandatory conditions, including the obligation to keep proper records: Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 1990 s.12(1)(d). In April 2009, the HFEA used its statutory powers to give a direction that the consents required under s.37 must be recorded in a specified form: respectively, Form WP ("Your consent to your partner being the legal parent") and Form PP ("Your consent to being the legal parent").

15.The HFEA direction to use the specific forms WP and PP is a condition of the clinic's licence. However, a failure to keep proper records does not of itself invalidate the licence conditions so that treatment ceases to be licensed treatment to which s.37(1) applies. This issue, which arose before Cobb J and Theis J, was resolved by the President in In the matter of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 (Cases A, B, C, D, E, F, G and H) [2015] EWHC 2602 (Fam). I respectfully agree with his conclusions, summarised at paragraph 63:

63.I conclude, therefore, that, in principle:

i) The court can act on parol evidence to establish that a Form WP or a Form PP which cannot be found was in fact properly completed and signed before the treatment began;

ii) The court can 'correct' mistakes in a Form WP or a Form PP either by rectification, where the requirements for that remedy are satisfied, or, where the mistake is obvious on the face of the document, by a process of construction without the need for rectification.

iii) A Form IC, if it is in the form of the Barts Form IC or the MFS Form IC as I have described them above, will, if properly completed and signed before the treatment began, meet the statutory requirements without the need for a Form WP or a Form PP.

iv) It follows from this that the court has the same powers to 'correct' a Form IC as it would have to 'correct' a Form WP or a Form PP.

By way of footnote, the President added:

"I express no views in relation to similar forms used by these or other clinics. I also make clear that nothing I have said should be treated as any encouragement to anyone not to use Form WP and Form PP."

16.The result was that the President found that the internal consent (IC) forms used in those cases were sufficient to satisfy s.37 in Case C (where no WP/PP forms were signed), and that they would have been sufficient in Case E and in Case F (where WP/PP forms had been lost). In addition to these three cases, the later decision of the President in Case M [2016] EWHC 1572 (Fam), in which signed IC forms were found to amount to valid consents, is also in point, as are the similar Cases P, Q, R, T, U, W and X: [2017] EWHC 49 (Fam).

17.To take an example, the father in Case M stated that:

"I am not married to [Y], but acknowledge that she and I are being treated together, and that I will become the legal father of any resulting child."

Y, however did not make a similar declaration in the same form. The IC forms in the three other cases (Cases C, E and F see paragraphs 29-31 of the judgment in Cases A etc.) were in somewhat similar terms to Case M, referring to becoming 'legally responsible', or to becoming 'the father', or 'the legal father'.

18.The question, not answered in the above cases, is whether in very similar overall circumstances, but with different IC forms, the same conclusion should be reached in the present case.

What is being consented to19.The statute requires consent to a man being treated as the father of any child resulting from the relevant licensed treatment. In the nature of things, treatment may be provided in cycles, as happened here. However, this does not mean that consent has in every case to be renewed before each individual treatment cycle, if the reality is that the couple are engaged in a continuous series of treatments to which their earlier consent is intended to apply. This point was considered and explained by the President in Case U: see paragraph 19 of the judgment. This is not to discourage renewal of consent, but what matters is that valid informed consent can be seen to apply to the treatment that is being provided. So, on the facts, a single consent may well apply to a series of treatment cycles. The existence of consent is a question of fact and it will all depend on the facts of the individual case.

What occurred in this case20.I find as facts that (as in Case M and the other similar cases):

(1)The treatment which led to the birth of the child was embarked upon and carried through jointly and with full knowledge by both X and Y.

(2)It was a single course of treatment, albeit that it took place in stages. If I am wrong about that (and it makes no difference to the outcome) the treatment that led to the child's birth was a single course of treatment beginning in 2009.

(3)From the outset and throughout, it was the couple's joint intention, and that of the clinic, that X would be a legal parent of the child. Each parent was aware that this was a matter which, legally, required the signing by each of them of consent forms. Each of them believed that they had signed the relevant forms as legally required and, more generally, had done whatever was needed to ensure that they would both be parents.

(4)From the moment when the pregnancy was confirmed, both X and Y believed that X was the other parent of the child. That remained their belief when the child was born.

(5)X and Y, believing that they were entitled to, and acting in complete good faith, registered the birth of their child, as they believed the child to be, showing both of them on the birth certificates as the child's parents, as they believed themselves to be.

(6)The first they knew that anything might be 'wrong' was when, some years later, they were contacted by the clinic.

(7)X's application to the court is wholeheartedly supported by Y.

21.I further find that as part of the paperwork surrounding their treatment, this couple participated in numerous significant steps:

(1)In December 2005, Y signed HFEA form [007], consenting to being treated together with X: that being the criterion under the 1990 legislation.

(2)In January 2006, X and Y jointly attended counselling to explore the implications of undergoing fertility for themselves and the resulting child.

(3)In December 2005 and June 2006, they jointly signed the Trust's IC form entitled 'Consents For Treatment'. This form states that it covers 'all aspects of treatment'. It ran to 26 pages and has a strong appearance of formality. In its preamble it refers to the need to 'identify individuals who will have the parental responsibility and which person/s will be responsible for the raising of the child or children that may be born as a result of treatment.' By signing the form X and Y specifically acknowledged that they would be responsible for the 'maternal nurturing' and 'paternal nurturing' of the child.

(4)On both dates, X (in Y's presence) signed the IC form consenting to the treatment and stating that:

"I am the husband/partner of [Y] and I consent to the course of treatment outlined above. I understand that I will become the legal father of any resulting child."

(5)On both dates, they jointly signed the IC form stating that they understood that the donor had consented to his not becoming the legal father of the child.

(6)On both dates, they jointly consented to embryo transfer, and to a number of other procedures regarding genetic material.

(7)In November 2006, they again signed an IC form to the same effect as that at (3-6) above.

(8)In 2007, they were seen at the clinic in relation to treatment that did not then take place as a donor pulled out.

(9)On 2 April 2009, they were seen by the embryologist who was then the Trust's responsible person to discuss further treatment with a donor embryo. It was this form of treatment that continued until the successful conception. The very imminent change in the law does not appear to have been discussed.

(10)In April 2009 and November 2009, they again jointly signed an IC form to the same broad effect as at (3-6) above.

(11)There is a note on the IC form just mentioned, written by the member of staff who witnessed the signatures in September and November 2009. It states: 'HFEA form signed'. What this means is unfortunately not known.

(12)In March, June and November 2010, the couple again jointly signed an IC form equivalent to those referred to at (3-6) above, though the form is not now to hand.

(13)In June 2011, they again jointly completed an IC form. This form, which differs from the earlier forms, includes a checklist which itself includes reference to 'The Legalities of Embryo Donation', including 'HFEA', 'Current Law' and 'Birth Certificate'. On this occasion, X and Y both signed a declaration that they understood that donors who had given effective consent would not be the legal parents of any resulting child, and acknowledged that they had been given information about the legalities of embryo donation.

22.Administratively, this is an unhappy picture. It can be seen that the couple signed a mass of consent paperwork in the reasonable belief that the Trust was ensuring that the legal position of themselves and any child born to them was being secured. However, the question is not what they were entitled to expect, but what the legal effect of their actions was.

Argument23.On behalf of the applicant, Mr Rowley QC submits that there is sufficient material for the Court to be able to conclude that the provisions of s.37 are satisfied. In 2005 and 2006 X explicitly confirmed in Y's presence, as witnessed by a member of the clinic's staff, that he would become the legal father. There is then joint confirmation on no fewer than ten occasions between 2005 and 2011 (six of which related to the treatment with donor embryos after September 2009) that

they would be the persons responsible for any child

they were to be responsible for nurturing any child

the donors would not be the legal parents of any child

What, asks Mr Rowley, would have been the purpose of their acknowledging responsibility for the child to the exclusion of the donors unless they knew and intended to convey that they would be the child's legal parents?

24.Mr Rowley fairly draws attention to the fact that the IC form in this case is not the same as that in Case M, or the IC forms in the three other cases (Cases C, E and F see paragraphs 29-31 of the judgment in Case A etc.) which referred to the partner becoming 'legally responsible', or to becoming 'the father', or 'the legal father'.

25.Finally, Mr Rowley urges that any other reading of the documents in this case would leave this family in a deeply unsatisfactory position. The only other way of X becoming the child's legal parent would be by adoption, which is seen as utterly inappropriate as a remedy in cases like this: see Case A, paragraph 71(vii) and Case I, paragraph 24 at [2016] EWHC 791 (Fam).

Conclusion26.I stand back and consider whether, as the statute requires, X gave written notice that he consented to being treated as the father of any resulting child and whether Y gave notice that she too consented to that. Having done so, my conclusion is that these conditions are satisfied in this case. Whether the treatment is considered to have begun in 2006 or 2009, the whole tone was set by the consents signed by X in the presence of Y and the clinic in 2005 and 2006 to his becoming the legal father of any resulting child. Thereafter, at each stage of the treatment, the couple gave signed, written notice to the clinic evidencing their consent to X becoming the child's father. The fact that the forms do not contain the wording that is to be found in in Forms WP and PP is no more than a reflection of administrative incompetence on the part of the Trust. What matters is the substance and total effect of the documents, which clearly express the intention of the couple to be treated as full and equal legal parents. Had they been asked at the time what they were doing in signing these documents, they would have said that they were doing what was necessary to achieve this parenthood. Had the clinic been asked what the couple was doing in signing these documents, it would have agreed. The difficulty here only arose because the clinic failed to give the couple the recommended tools for the job, but I find that the couple still managed to get the job done with the tools that they were given.

27.I recognise that this conclusion is based on somewhat different IC forms than those considered in other cases, but nevertheless find that the agreed fatherhood condition in s.37 is satisfied in this case. It is an outcome that conforms with the twin pillars of the legislation informed consent and child welfare.

28.There will accordingly be a declaration that X is as in law (as he is in life) the child's legal parent, alongside Y. I will make a separate order in relation to the costs that are to be paid by the Trust, and will direct that the file is not to be accessed by anyone without the permission of the President of the Family Division for the time being. ____________________

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B v B (Fertility Treatment - Paperwork Error) [2017] EWHC 599 (Fam) - Family Law Week

Should the 14-day limit on embryo research be extended? – Prospect (blog)

Strict regulation can helpnot hinderscientific progress by Philip Ball / December 12, 2016 / Leave a comment

Human embryonic stem cells, in cell culture

In 1984, a committee appointed by the British government to draw up guidelines for in vitro fertilisation (IVF) in the wake of the birth of Louise Brown, the first test-tube baby, recommended that scientific research on human embryos should be permitted up to a maximum of 14 days after conception.

The recommendations of this report, led by moral philosopher Mary (now Baroness) Warnock, didnt become law until the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act was passed by parliament six years later. Among other things, the act set up the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) to license and regulate all in vitro embryo creation and manipulation, whether for IVF or for scientific research. Violations of the 14-day limit became a criminal offence.

That limit has remained in place ever since. But now some scientists believe it should be extended to 28 days. These proposals were discussed on 7th December at a meeting in London organised by charity the Progress Educational Trust. It marked the beginning of what seems likely to be a broad and extended discussion among scientists, bioethicists, fertility specialists, religious leaders and others who have a stake in the moral, legal and scientific status of the human embryo.

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Should the 14-day limit on embryo research be extended? - Prospect (blog)

A Glimpse Into The Earliest Genetic Mutations Of Human Life – Asian Scientist Magazine

Every time a cell in the early embryo divides, three mutations creep in; a rate much higher than previously thought.

Asian Scientist Newsroom | March 29, 2017 | In the Lab

AsianScientist (Mar. 29, 2017) - From the time a zygote first divides into two cells, very early mutations determine which cell becomes more dominant and leads to a higher proportion of the adult body. These findings have been published in Nature.

The earliest stages of human development have been impossible to study directly until now. In the present study, researchers analyzed the whole genome sequences of blood samples collected from 279 individuals with breast cancer and discovered 163 mutations that occurred very early in the embryonic development of those people.

Once identified, the researchers used mutations from the first, second and third divisions of the fertilized egg to calculate which proportion of adult cells resulted from each of the first two cells in the embryo.

They found that these first two cells contribute differently to the whole body. One cell gives rise to about 70 percent of the adult body tissues, whereas the other cell has a more minor contribution, leading to about 30 percent of the tissues. This skewed contribution continues for some cells in the second and third generation too.

Originally pinpointed in normal blood cells from cancer patients, the researchers then looked for these mutations in cancer samples that had been surgically removed from the patients during treatment. Unlike normal tissues composed of multiple somatic cell clones, a cancer develops from one mutant cell. Therefore, each proposed embryonic mutation should either be present in all of the cancer cells in a tumor, or none of them. This proved to be the case, and by using these cancer samples, the researchers were able to validate that the mutations had originated during early development.

This is the first time that anyone has seen where mutations arise in the very early human development. It is like finding a needle in a haystack. There are just a handful of these mutations, compared with millions of inherited genetic variations, and finding them allowed us to track what happened during embryogenesis, said Dr. Young Seok Ju, first author from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST).

During this study, the researchers were also able to measure the rate of mutation in early human development for the first time, up to three generations of cell division. Previous researchers had estimated one mutation per cell division, but this study measured three mutations for each cell doubling, in every daughter cell.

Mutations during the development of the embryo occur by two processes known as mutational signatures 1 and 5. These mutations are fairly randomly distributed through the genome, and the vast majority of them will not affect the developing embryo. However, a mutation that occurs in an important gene can lead to disease such as developmental disorders.

This is a significant step forward in widening the range of biological insights that can be extracted using genome sequences and mutations, said Sir Mike Stratton, lead author on the paper and Director of the Sanger Institute.

Essentially, the mutations are archaeological traces of embryonic development left in our adult tissues, so if we can find and interpret them, we can understand human embryology better. This is just one early insight into human development, with hopefully many more to come in the future.

The article can be found at: Ju et al. (2017) Somatic Mutations Reveal Asymmetric Cellular Dynamics in the Early Human Embryo.

Source: KAIST; Photo: Shutterstock. Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of AsianScientist or its staff.

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A Glimpse Into The Earliest Genetic Mutations Of Human Life - Asian Scientist Magazine

‘Numerous barriers’ in accessing EU infertility services – euronews

A new EU report claims there are numerous barriers in accessing infertility services across the European Union.

The document, produced by Fertility Europe and the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology, shows around 25 million EU citizens are affected by infertility.

It also highlights that fertility rates vary across the nine countries looked at, with the lowest in Spain and Poland and the highest in France. But even the highest rate falls short of the population stabilisation rate of 2.1 live births per woman.

A Romanian MEP, who has hosted a debate in Brussels, says Europe faces a huge demographic problem.

In order to resolve this issue, its necessary to look to the internal policy and fertility policy must be internal policy in all member states, said Norica Nicolai.

Born in Britain in 1978, Louise Brown was the worlds first so-called test tube baby. IVF used to help her mother who couldnt conceive naturally. It was revolutionary, but highly controversial.

Now 38, Louise has been in Brussels for the release of the report.

Before mum was pregnant with me, mum actually went to the doctors with depression. And the doctor underlined the fact that she couldnt get pregnant that was causing the depression, she told Euronews.

So, its just the awareness for people to realise that its not just for mums and dads to have a baby, its creating families.

IVF the process of fertilising an egg with sperm outside the body remains controversial.

What we would like to see is much more restorative medicine and therapies, which actually address the problem of infertility at its source, not more IVF, said Mark Bhagwandin, from the UK-based Life charity.

Louise says all women in the EU should be offered IVF, if they cant conceive naturally. She thanks it for her existence, and has gone on to have a family of her own.

The Policy Audit on Fertility looked at the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Romania, Spain, Sweden and the UK. Click here for full document.

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'Numerous barriers' in accessing EU infertility services - euronews

5 Reasons To Stop Calling Dads Of Unborn Babies A ‘Father To Be’ – The Federalist

Every parent I know has developed a pregnancy pet-peeve. Most women I know have said theirs was unwanted touching of their blossoming baby bump.For my pregnant wife, its how total strangers suddenly feel the need to explain how little sleep were going to get once baby is born.

I dont mind that so much, because I assume these are well-intentioned people trying to prepare us for an event we simply cannot understand yet. No, my pregnancy pet peeve was being called a father-to-be.

The peeve began to develop very early. When I announced to my co-workers that my wife is pregnant, they were happy for us. They asked about the due date and whether we were having a boy or a girl. And they congratulated me: Youre going to be a dad! they said, in the future tense.

I soon became very sensitive to this phrase. But I gave my co-workers the benefit of the doubt. Maybe Im just being a grammar nerd, I thought. Certainly this wont be something I hear that often.

Unfortunately, I was wrong. Everywhere I turned people were quick to label my wife and I as parents-to-be. This is not just among radical pro-abortion activists who reduce pre-born humans to cell clusters, but even on major parenting websites: Parents.com, Parenting.com, and TheBump.com all regularly use the language dad-to-be when referring to men with unborn children.

Its an egalitarian problem as well: People.com called Beyonc a mom-to-be after her announcement of her pregnancy with twins. The language of future parenthood applied to couples celebrating their current pregnancy permeates our culture.

Look up the word father. Merriam-Webster gives a good clear definition: A man who has begotten a child. That is about as clear as it gets. A father is a man with a child. That means any man who has impregnated a woman is a father.

Our culture gets it exactly backward: Every man who has not yet reproduced including my son, still in utero is a father-to-be, by virtue of his potential ability to impregnate a woman. I was once a father-to-be, until my wife became pregnant. At that moment, even before we found out, I was, and always will be, a father.

This inversion of language, ingrained in even our parenting culture, needs to be addressed for several reasons. Im a theology nerd, so heres a theology nerd analogy to help illuminate the problem: At the Council of Ephesus in 431 AD, bishops of the church met to decide what to call Mary. Was she merely Christotokos, or Christ-bearer, as Nestorius asserted? Or was she Theotokos, the bearer of God?

The council found in favor of Theotokos, because they recognized that the title we give Mary is really dependent on who we think Christ is. In other words, what we say about the blessed virgin is really a confession about her son. So also, in the matter at hand, those who use the terms mother- or father-to-be are really making a statement about the child. That statement needs to change.

As much as the Left likes to think of conservatives as science deniers on points like global warming, its difficult for them to maintain any moral high ground when their rhetoric on the unborn is so anti-science. Take Bill Nyes now infamous appearance on Big Thinks YouTube channel. As Professor Robert George and bioethicist Patrick Lee note in their response to Nye, the only science Nye cites is that fertilized eggs spontaneously abort pre-implantation at a very high rate.

After that, he just does bad philosophy. They quote several embryology textbooks that explain how and why unique human life begins at conception. A recent study has demonstrated that, even before implantation, a human embryo is autonomous and seeks its own growth and good. Thats some science, guy.

Even when abortion is not specifically in view, it is just as science-denying to use to be when speaking of parents. The human in utero is fully human, and when we casually dismiss this tiny, precious human, we dismiss and disrespect so much more of the human experience.

The language of future or potential parenthood is disrespectful to the parents of miscarried babies. Society grieves when parents lose their born children. We recognize that nature is disordered in a horrendous way when this takes place. But if we continue to talk about parents of pre-born children as if they are not really parents yet, we deny the legitimate grief of parents who lose their children to miscarriage.

Like parents who have lost born children, the mothers and fathers who have lost children to miscarriage do grieve. The American Psychological Association reported one study that indicates 15 percent of female participants who had a miscarriage had clinically significant depression and/or anxiety during and after pregnancies for up to three years.

The language our culture uses actively devalues the babies these parents have lost. Those using the epithets mom- or dad-to-be might as well tell parents that their grief over a miscarried child is as inappropriate as a woman grieving over her period. Both are merely potential children, not children in themselves. So on top of the grief of a lost child, parents have to deal with a society that doesnt even recognize their grief as legitimate.

My wife has already lost hundreds of hours of sleep to the myriad discomforts of pregnancy. On top of that, she has spent much of time exhaustedas her body provides for the miraculous development of the baby in her womb. She has made sacrifices that I cannot even begin to understand as she participates in this wonderment.

None of this is to paint a bleak picture of pregnancy. My wife will be the first to tell you how much she loves this time of our lives. But calling her a mom-to-be diminishes my wifes important contributions and sacrifices in her vocation as mother.

Not that I have yet made sacrifices to rival those of my wife, but I, too, see this language as an attack on my vocation. I work a full-time job as the sole breadwinner in our house now that my wife is pregnant, simultaneously maintaining high marks and a full school schedule. All of this is a life I have chosen for the sake of my wife and son it is my responsibility to protect and provide for my pre-born child. When people refer to a father who is working hard to provide for his partners comfort and to prepare for the birth of their child as a father-to-be, it devalues the vocation of father that he has already taken upon himself.

It is rarely disputed that fathers have responsibilities to their children. Our society has enacted child support laws specifically to ensure that fathers fulfill their duty to provide for their children, under penalty of law. We have said that it is wrong for a man to abandon children he has fathered.

But when we call a man a father-to-be, we are saying he does not yet have these responsibilities. Thus we should not be surprised when we hear stories in which men pressure women to kill their children by abortion, as Mark and Nathan Hamill reportedly did not too long ago, in this very galaxy.

I now actually look forward to people calling me a father-to-be, even though its also a pet peeve.

C.S. Lewis put it well: In a sort of ghastly simplicity we remove the organ and demand the function. We make men without chests and expect of them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honour and are shocked to find traitors in our midst. We castrate and bid the geldings be fruitful. In this case, we dont call men fathers, and are aghast at them refusing to father well.

I now actually look forward to people calling me a father-to-be, even though its also a pet peeve. People who are pro-life often dont know how to talk to others about their convictions. Its not easy to bring abortion up in casual conversation. Its a taboo subject, and expressing your pro-life beliefs can result in losing friends, or worse. One teacher in Canada even lost his job because he expressed his pro-life views.

But here, far removed from the abortion conversation, when someone calls me a father-to-be I can ask what exactly he mean by it. I can question her position without ever mentioning abortion. I can ask what he thinks my child is, whether he is human, and all sorts of other questions, all without getting the other persons guard up. So now I thank God every time someone calls me a father-to-be.

Jonathan Graham is a husband, father, and Lutheran layman studying classics and creative writing in Charleston, South Carolina. You can follow him on Twitter: @johnnyis_.

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5 Reasons To Stop Calling Dads Of Unborn Babies A 'Father To Be' - The Federalist

The Ida Hudson Callaway Building: LC’s New Beacon of Pride – The Hilltop News

By Meagan Lennon

Many LaGrange College student s, myself included, were skeptical when construction first began. I recall thinking, Why do we need a new science building? The current one is perfectly fine.

Little did I know that I would be so wrong.

Dr. Arthur Sikora used a chemical reaction to cut the ribbon at the grand opening.

With its spacious laboratories, state-of-the-art technology, and modern design, the new Ida Callaway Hudson Lab Science Building provides the best accommodations for students and professors alike. Comparatively, the memories of the old building seem like ancient history since the new building has been completed. As Dr. William Paschal, professor of anatomy and physiology, neurobiology, and embryology, says, We no longer have to share space. There is so much more room to maneuver and see.

In the old building, most of the classes had to share the same lab space, but now every class has its own lab. The lab spaces in the old building were crowded, and they could hardly fit an entire class. However, in the Ida, each lab space can fit up to twenty-four students with space to spare.

We now have neat equipment that is typically found at research universities, and we dont have to share.

Everything in the new building is state-of-the-art and perfect for the budding scientist. According to Dr. Nickie Cauthen, the science department chair and professor of genetics, biology, and molecular biology, We now have neat equipment that is typically found at research universities, and we dont have to share.

Dr. William Paschal leads his lab on the first day of school.

In the chemistry labs, each lab group has a dedicated drawer for beakers, test tubes, and other equipment, and lab partners can safely conduct experiments without worrying about volatile gases under the new hoods. In the anatomy lab, each table has its own snorkel so the lab does not reek of the dissection specimen.

Professors can also use special microscopes to project specimens onto the projection screen. This addition makes it easier for students to understand what the professor is talking about during the lecture or the laboratory session.

Although the Ida is truly something to marvel, its space and its technology are not its sole captivating features. It was built with professors and students in mind. Students can use multiple study rooms and we love being able to write on the whiteboard walls that separate the classrooms from the offices. As Dr. Cauthen states, When we were the old building, it was rare to see students outside of class times. But now? The students want to hang around.

The whiteboard walls are directly outside of the offices, so if we are struggling with a concept, we can draw out what we understand and ask the professor any questions. I have taken advantage of the whiteboard feature many times, and it is perhaps one of my favorite things about the Ida.

When we were the old building, it was rare to see students outside of class times. But now? The students want to hang around.

Dr. Cauthen states, We are hoping that the new building will draw in new students.

Meagan Lennon, 19, is a sophomore biology major.

The building itself is more than equipped to handle incoming students because, as Dr. Cauthen claimed, We dont have to worry about overcrowding, and we have room to grow.

Students of all majors can appreciate the spacious hallways and the technologically advanced lab rooms. Professors can provide students with extra help on the whiteboard walls that line the hallways. And the extra study space is more accessible to groups. The Ida Callaway Hudson Lab Sciences Building stands as a beacon of pride on our historic and prestigious campus.

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The Ida Hudson Callaway Building: LC's New Beacon of Pride - The Hilltop News

How does evolution stand up to scrutiny? – Lethbridge Herald

By Letter to the Editor on March 26, 2017.

A quick answer to J. Cameron Frasers question March 5: much as Jewish activists must, Christians, too, should defend each other. When John P. Nightingale attacks Tony Ouwerkerks Christian faith as an outdated line of thinking (March 2), he substitutes a worldview that doesnt exactly handle scrutiny.

Bacteria gain drug resistance through impaired genetic information, not by structuring new information in defence. The whale fossil, Pakicetus inachus, proved entirely land-based, and was declared a whale only from skull fragments. The question Was Darwin Wrong? might be better, Would Darwin have believed evolution possible, knowing what we now know about embryology, morphology, paleontology and more? Its a worthy question. The answer tells us whether Darwinism merits a part to play in the sciences.

Nightingale still has sarcasm: Science 101, right? Well, lets look.

If Trappist-1 has any luminosity increase, its planets would suffer heat spikes. That close in, the worlds are tidally locked, unable to rotate for a day/night cycle. Do they have atmospheres dense enough to retain surface liquids? Do they have magnetic fields strong enough to repel their suns radiation? Solar flares could sear away their atmospheres, and Trappists mere proximity would degrade them anyway our own suns depleted the atmosphere of Mars, which is much more distant. What foothold for life is possible around Trappist-1?

Mass spectrometrys isolated tissue elements like collagen fibres and red blood cell remnants in the fossilized bones of six different dinosaurs revolutionary findings, because tissue cant last for tens of millions of years. Paleochronology adds, unexpectedly, that every dinosaur fossil tested for carbon-14 offers an age of 22,000 to 41,000 years suggesting these dinosaurs might have been more recent, perhaps even fulfilling the human desire to see one.

Flat Earth is Nightingales ad hominem for home-schoolers, since no one in Christendom seriously doubts that the Earth is spherical. Resorting to such a projection sums up Nightingales apparent motivation: to lash out at Mr. Ouwerkerk for not agreeing with him.

A century before Darwin, Carl Linnaeus catalogued all known living things, classifying them in Latin binomial (e.g., Systema Naturae) which more helpfully arranged the categories of living things. Darwin, by contrast, admitted that he was supposing, with his tree of life schematic, the ancestries of known life forms. Today, Darwinism stays in force mainly through the vehemence of its true believers, who impose it on all new discoveries and insistently quell dissent.

Tom Yeoman

Lethbridge

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How does evolution stand up to scrutiny? - Lethbridge Herald