Campaigners: Don't play GodBy EMMA MORTON
MAY 04, 2007
CAMPAIGNERS last night warned couples “not to play God” with a revolutionary home test that reveals an unborn baby’s sex at six weeks.
They fear the £189 kit will create a massive leap in abortions if would-be parents are not having the gender they want.
Michaela Aston, spokeswoman for the charity LIFE, said: “This test is very dangerous. It could lead to babies being aborted simply for being the ‘wrong’ sex.”
And Julia Millington, of the Prolife Alliance, said: “There is a real risk that some people would choose to abort babies of a certain gender.”
The earliest couples had previously known the gender of their baby was at the 20-week scan — four weeks before the legal limit for an abortion.
But some health authorities have already stopped revealing that information for fear of “wrong-sex” terminations.
The Pink or Blue Early Test Kit, launched on the internet this week by DNA Worldwide, is claimed to be 98 per cent reliable.
Mums-to-be prick a finger to give a small blood sample. They put this on a filter paper and send it to a lab for testing.
Lab technicians determine the sex by looking for the Y chromosome found in males in three tests. Each works because an unborn babyÂ’s DNA is present in the mother for six weeks.
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Wrong-sex abortions are more common in some ethnic minorities — with boys being more highly prized than girls.
The North West London NHS Trust is one of the authorities to have banned revealing gender information from scans.
Britain has one of the highest abortion rates in Europe, with more than 185,000 a year. More than 80 per cent are performed at under 13 weeks.
Prolife Alliance’s Ms Millington added: “We have already reached an alarming situation where hospitals in some parts of the UK will no longer disclose the gender of an unborn child.
“That hospitals adopt this policy shows it is already a real problem. Abortion for gender does not fall within the terms of UK abortion law.”
David Nicholson, director of DNA Worldwide — based in Cranleigh, Surrey and the British arm of US company Consumer Genetics Inc — said: “This test is based on the science of foetal DNA in the bloodstream.
“Parents are excited by the pregnancy and want to know the sex of their baby. A lot even build an extra room or redecorate one for the baby — and they don’t want to wait until their 20-week scan to find the sex.”