
| British
Fertility Society |
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Happy (belated) New Year!
After a quiet
end to last year, the BFS Press Office has experienced a busy
start to 2006. The Science Media Centre in London hosted a press
briefing on 5 January, bringing together some of the UK’s
most established fertility experts and top health journalists to
talk about fertility.
Robert Winston, Peter Braude, Simon Fishel and our own Allan
Pacey and Virginia Bolton were among the names facing an audience
consisting of the BBC, Telegraph, Guardian, Times and New Scientist,
amongst others. The panel answered questions on a range of topics
from egg preservation to the costs of IVF to the NHS.
The event was a huge success, stealing headlines the following
day (see below in the News section), and bringing useful
publicity to the BFS Winter College taking place at the same time.
The experience also leant the Press Office an invaluable opportunity
to strengthen and extend our alliances with those all important
media contacts.
In other news, two fertility tests were launched this January attracted
substantial media attention: Fertell, a test for men which
tests the quality of sperm, and Plan Ahead for women (developed
by Bill Ledger at Sheffield University), which checks the patients
ovarian reserve. See the News section below for more details. |
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| WATCH
OUT FOR… |
National
Infertility Day (NID)
National
Infertility Day will take place on Saturday 10
June 2006 and is set to help raise awareness of infertility and to
make information available to patients. Clinics, companies in the
field of infertility, support organisations and more, will be attending.
A programme will soon be available. More information can be found
at:
http://www.nationalinfertilityday.co.uk/.
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HFEA
Annual Meeting (March
29 2006)
The
Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) is holding
their annual Conference on 29 March 2006 in central London. It
is expected to focus on multiple births and the possibility of
future regulation of the sector, and may attract a fair deal of
media coverage. See here for more info:
http://www.hfea.gov.uk/PublicEvents
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Review of the Act
The Government is expected to timetable the
parliamentary legislation for the Review of the Act, in the next
few weeks. We will bring you more information when we receive it,
but keep your eyes open for any media coverage.
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The
Baby Race (6-8 February)
This programme aired Monday 6 - Wednesday 8 February, looking at single women
wanting to conceive by more unconventional terms, becoming Mothers without
men.
http://www.channel4.com/health/microsites/B/baby_race/
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| IN
THE PRESS |
| November
2006 |
Concerns over IVF Contamination Risk (New Scientist, News
page 10, 20 November 2005)
Some children conceived by a
common IVF procedure could be carrying chunks of bacterial DNA
in their chromosomes, according to an experiment in mice. Spanish
researchers say that it is possible for children’s
DNA to be accidentally modified if the sperm sample that was injected
into a woman’s egg was contaminated with bacteria. The team
say such accidental genetic modification would be very rare but
are calling for fertility doctors to take more precautions. (No web
link)
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| Checks on IVF parents simplified (BBC Online,
3 November 2005)
People seeking fertility treatment will face
fewer and faster checks to make sure they will be suitable parents
under new guidelines. Professor Alison Murdoch, chair of the British
Fertility Society, said: 'The 'Welfare of the Child' clause in
the HFEA Act has always been a problem. The BFS is pleased that
the HFEA is responding to concerns from both clinics and patients."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4400034.stm |

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| Embryo
scientist quits team over ethics fear (Guardian,
14 November 2005)
Gerald
Schatten, researcher in embryology at the University of Pittsburgh,
ended a 20-month partnership with his South Korean counterpart
Hwang Woo-Suk, claiming he flouted ethical rules and then lied
about their practices.
http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/worldwide/story/0,9959,1642201,00.html
This story was also reported in the following press:
(BBC Health Online, 14 November 2005)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/4435364.stm
(New Scientist, 14 November 2005)
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn8312
(Reuters
Health Online, 14 November 2005 – registration
required)
http://www.reutershealth.com/archive/2005/11/14/eline/links/20051114elin006.html
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| December
2005 |
Boys more
likely when pregnancy takes longer (Time
to pregnancy and sex of offspring: cohort study, BMJ,
17 December 2005)
The
longer it takes to get pregnant, the more chance there is of
having a boy,
finds a study in BMJ.
http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/331/7530/1437
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Scientists
Worm Out Fertility's Secrets (Forbes.com,
19 December 2005)
Two genes in the lowly roundworm may give important new clues to human infertility.
Focusing on the much-studied genome of Caenorhabditis elegans -- or
simply C. elegans -- researchers have found that two genes named egg-1 and egg-2 must
be present in the worm's eggs before sperm can make effective contact with an
egg.
http://www.forbes.com/lifestyle/health/feeds/hscout/2005/12/19/hscout529736.html
Also reported here:
Fertility
Genes Discovered At Rutgers University Genetics May Guide New Infertility Therapies
(Biospace, 22 December 2005)
Rutgers geneticists have reported
groundbreaking research on the genetics of fertility. They have
discovered two genes, aptly named egg-1 and egg-2, required for
fertilization to take place. The proteins encoded by these genes
are similar to low density lipoprotein (LDL) receptors, known from
cholesterol and fat metabolism but never before specifically implicated
in fertilization.
http://www.biospace.com/news_story.aspx?StoryID=5626 |
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| January
2006 |
|
Some
articles stemming from the fertility press briefing are listed
below. This was also covered in a range of other media such
as the Today Programme on Radio 4 and an interview on BBC television,
to which we don’t have links.
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Clinics
prepare for 'lifestyle' fertility treatment (Guardian,
6 January 2006)
Fertility clinics are gearing up to open
their doors to fertile couples seeking treatment as a lifestyle
choice rather than a medical necessity.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/frontpage/story/0,16518,1680485,00.html
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Frozen
eggs will allow women to put family life on ice (Times,
6 January 2006)
Women in their twenties will be freezing their
eggs to delay motherhood for social reasons within a decade, fertility
specialists predict.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-1972265,00.html
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Older mothers 'could routinely use frozen eggs' (Daily
Mail, 6 January 2006)
Women may soon be delaying motherhood
until their 40’s
with improved egg-freezing, an expert claims.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/liv...
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| Other news in January: |
Telling the time on a woman's body clock (Guardian, 26
January 2006)
Women who fear they may be running out of time
in which to have a baby are being offered a new test to predict
the rate at which their egg reserves are declining (developed
by Bill Ledger)…Richard
Kennedy, a Coventry-based fertility expert and spokesman for the
British Fertility Society, said: "This gives information but
it might also engender false anxieties. Normally when we do tests
it's in a hospital setting with follow-up care and advice. But
home-based testing is the way things are going."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/frontpage/story/0,,1695153,00.html
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Male
fertility kit goes on sale (Fertell) (BBC Health
Online, 4 January 2006)
The world's first over-the-counter
home fertility test for men has been developed by scientists
at Birmingham University. Dr Allan Pacey, Senior Lecturer at
the University of Sheffield and secretary of the British Fertility
Society, said: "This is a neat device
which actually examines how well sperm perform under 'test conditions'
rather than just simply counting them and seeing how well they
move.”
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/west_midlands/4579832.stm
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More IVF could be provided if only one embryo transferred (Bionews,
16 January 2006)
UK researchers say that an additional 10,000
cycles of IVF per year could be provided free on the National
Health Service (NHS), if clinics took action to reduce the number
of multiple births following IVF. It is common for women undergoing
IVF to have two embryos implanted at a time, to increase their
chance of becoming pregnant, and some women may even have three
embryos implanted.
http://www.bionews.org.uk/new.lasso?storyid=2885
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| OTHER
NEWS |
Feedback
We are very keen to hear feeback about our work. Are you happy with
our work? Do you value the emails detailing fertility in the news,
and these quarterly Media Reviews? Is there anything you would change
about our service? All feedback will be welcomed and readily acted
upon.
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If
you live in London…
We get lots of enquiries from
the press looking for people in London to comment on breaking
fertility news, or to provide more general advice and information
on fertility. Our current list of London contacts is still somewhat
sparse, so if you are based in the city or its surrounding areas
and are willing to take media enquiries every so often, please
contact Jo or Tom for a chat.
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| Since November we have received 79 press enquiries. |
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Our Contact details:
Jo Thurston or Tom Parkhill can be contacted on:
Tel: 01454 642244
Fax: 01454 642222
Email: jo.thurston@endocrinology.org
Press Office on the web: www.fertility.org.uk/press/index.html
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