SECTIONS
Home
Society
SciTech
Planet
Cosmos

SPECIAL
Contents
About

Future Shock: Men Could Have Babies, Expert Says

A leading British fertility expert says it should be possible for a man to carry a baby to term and then deliver it by Caesarean section.

Mike
By Michael Lindemann

Start Date: 2/25/99

According to the London Sunday Times of February 21, Britain's leading fertility expert Lord Winston, aka Professor Robert Winston, believes a man could carry a baby to term and then deliver it by Caesarean section.

In Winston's view, modern medical technology will soon allow homosexual male couples to bear children, or allow a heterosexual male to carry a child if his wife is unable to for medical reasons.

"Male pregnancy would certainly be possible and would be the same as when a woman has an ectopic pregnancy -- outside the uterus -- although to sustain it, you'd have to give the man lots of female hormones," Winston told the Times. He will outline the concept in his new book, The IVF Revolution, to be published in April. IVF stands for in vitro fertilization.

Winston acknowledges that there could be a few problems with the technique. Among other things, the man could experience internal bleeding -- and he might grow breasts. "I don't think there would be a rush of people wanting to implement this technology," he said.




Excelsior, Michael Lindemann's new novel (written under the pen name Michael Paul), depicts a wholly plausible near future in which human cloning is both widespread and widely abused; terrorists have access to target-specific biological weapons; recreational space travel is commonplace; and mounting pressures of global climate change, environmental decline, population growth and civil unrest inspire radical new approaches to urban security.



Built by Frontier on a Macintosh on 6/17/00; 11:58:40 AM.
Web Comments - Produced by Larry Lowe
Served 8975 times since 2/25/99.
Will Change in Israel Bring Peace in Mid-East?

The landslide victory of Ehud Barak in Israel raised hopes for a revival of the Mid-East peace process. But Barak must first form a government.

World Population Still Growing Fast

The U.S. Population Institute says Earth's human population increased by 78 million in 1998; and 97% of the increase occurred in poor nations.

China Protests U.S.-Japan Effort on Missile Shield

Chinese officials say that a proposed U.S.-Japan collaboration on a new missile defense system could seriously destabilize the Asia-Pacific region.

U.N. Says 1999 Will Be Hungry Year

A U.N. study says more people will go hungry in 1999 due to major natural and man-made disasters that occurred in 1998.

Global Population Growth Is Slowing, Study Says

Increasing death rates from AIDs and starvation in the world's most impoverished regions will slow the overall growth of world population, according to the Worldwatch Institute.

New U.S. Defense Spending to Reverse Decade of Decline

In his State of the Union address on Jan 19, 1999, President Clinton announced plans to increase defense spending, emphasizing the need for a national missile defense.

1998 a Disaster For Insurers, Leading Firms Say

1998 was a year of exceptional natural disasters and the second highest total damages on records, more than triple those of 1997.

China's Water Crisis Could Threaten Global Security

China faces an impending water shortage that could undermine its food production, boost world grain prices and precipitate political instability in many developing countries.

China's Threat to the U.S. Should Not Be Overblown

Conservative U.S. lawmakers have claimed that Chinese theft of nuclear secrets has given China virtual weapons parity with the U.S., but most experts say such fears are greatly overblown.

Aids Vaccine to Begin Testing in Africa

In February, 1999, the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced commencement of AIDS vaccine testing in Uganda.