Liverpool Women’s Hospital to increase genetic testing of babies – Liverpool Echo

Liverpool Womens Hospital is to expand its ability to genetically test newborn babies 12-fold.

The NHS Foundation Trust will be able to screen all infants for inherited conditions or illnesses and plan for early treatment as part of a major new IT project.

IT firm Novosco will introduce the computing system which also contribute to a major population health programme in Liverpool - analysing genetic information by location, identifying and enabling work to prevent localised health issues.

The role of genetics in healthcare is one of the most rapidly expanding areas of development for Liverpool Womens.

It provides a regional clinical genetics service covering a population of around 2.8 million people from across Merseyside, Cheshire and the Isle of Man.

Chief executive Kathryn Thomson posted on the trusts website: To discover that you or any child you have or plan to have may be at risk of a genetic disorder which could cause disability or a rare condition is traumatic.

People are sometimes shocked and anxious and wonder what the future might hold.

They need as much information and support as possible to help them cope.

That is why the often unsung work of our clinical genetics team is so important, providing diagnosis and supporting families when they need it most.

Novosco managing director Patrick McAliskey said: We are delighted to secure this contract which will enable the trust to take genetic testing to the next level and play an important role in the identification and prevention of conditions and illnesses in new-born babies and the wider population.

Original post:
Liverpool Women's Hospital to increase genetic testing of babies - Liverpool Echo

Genmab and Seattle Genetics to Co-develop Tisotumab Vedotin for Solid Tumors – Business Wire (press release)

COPENHAGEN, Denmark & BOTHELL, Wash.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Genmab A/S (Nasdaq Copenhagen: GEN) and Seattle Genetics, Inc. (Nasdaq: SGEN) announced today that Seattle Genetics, Inc. has exercised its option to co-develop tisotumab vedotin. The companies originally entered into a commercial license and collaboration agreement in October 2011 under which Seattle Genetics had the right to exercise a co-development option for tisotumab vedotin at the end of Phase I clinical development. Tisotumab vedotin, an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) targeting tissue factor, is currently being evaluated in Phase I/II clinical studies in solid tumors. Going forward, Genmab and Seattle Genetics will co-develop and share all future costs and profits for tisotumab vedotin on a 50:50 basis.

The combination of Genmabs differentiated HuMax-TF antibody and Seattle Genetics clinically-validated antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) technology has resulted in encouraging preliminary data for tisotumab vedotin in selected solid tumors. We very much look forward to working with Seattle Genetics to further develop this exciting first-in-class ADC product, said Jan van de Winkel, Ph.D., Chief Executive Officer of Genmab.

Our ADC partnership with Genmab has generated promising Phase I/II data for tisotumab vedotin in patients with recurrent cervical cancer. As Seattle Genetics opts into co-development of this clinical program, we add another potential product to our strong pipeline, said Clay Siegall, Ph.D., President and Chief Executive Officer of Seattle Genetics. Together with Genmab, we look forward to advancing tisotumab vedotin for the treatment of solid tumors.

Preliminary data from the ongoing Phase I/II study of tisotumab vedotin in solid tumors (GEN701) were announced in June 2017, demonstrating antitumor activity and manageable safety in recurrent cervical cancer patients. This announcement can be found here. Updated preliminary data from the Phase I/II study will be presented in an oral presentation at the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) 2017 Congress in Madrid (Spain), September 8-12, 2017.

Todays news does not impact the 2017 financial guidance issued by Genmab on May 10, 2017.

About the collaboration

In October 2011, Genmab and Seattle Genetics, Inc. entered into a commercial license and collaboration agreement for ADCs. Under the agreement, Genmab was granted rights to utilize Seattle Genetics ADC technology with its HuMax-TF antibody. Seattle Genetics was granted rights to exercise a co-development and co-commercialization option at the end of Phase I clinical development for tisotumab vedotin. With todays news Seattle Genetics exercises its option to co-develop tisotumab vedotin and the companies will share all future costs and profits for the product on a 50:50 basis. Seattle Genetics will be responsible for commercialization activities in the US, Canada, and Mexico, while Genmab will be responsible for commercialization activities in all other territories. Each party has the option to co-promote by employing up to 40 percent of the sales effort in the other partys territories.

About tisotumab vedotin

Tisotumab vedotin is an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) composed of a human antibody that binds to tissue factor (TF) and Seattle Genetics ADC technology that utilizes a cleavable linker and the cytotoxic drug monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE). TF is a protein involved in tumor signaling and angiogenesis. Based on its high expression on many solid tumors and its rapid internalization, TF was selected as a target for an ADC approach. Tisotumab vedotin is in Phase I/II clinical studies for solid tumors.

About Genmab

Genmab is a publicly traded, international biotechnology company specializing in the creation and development of differentiated antibody therapeutics for the treatment of cancer. Founded in 1999, the company has two approved antibodies, DARZALEX (daratumumab) for the treatment of certain multiple myeloma indications, and Arzerra (ofatumumab) for the treatment of certain chronic lymphocytic leukemia indications. Daratumumab is in clinical development for additional multiple myeloma indications, other blood cancers, and solid tumors. A subcutaneous formulation of ofatumumab is in development for relapsing multiple sclerosis. Genmab also has a broad clinical and pre-clinical product pipeline. Genmab's technology base consists of validated and proprietary next generation antibody technologies - the DuoBody platform for generation of bispecific antibodies, and the HexaBody platform which creates effector function enhanced antibodies. The company intends to leverage these technologies to create opportunities for full or co-ownership of future products. Genmab has alliances with top tier pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies. For more information visit http://www.genmab.com.

About Seattle Genetics

Seattle Genetics is an innovative biotechnology company that develops and commercializes novel antibody-based therapies for the treatment of cancer. The companys industry-leading antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) technology harnesses the targeting ability of antibodies to deliver cell-killing agents directly to cancer cells. ADCETRIS (brentuximab vedotin), the companys lead product, in collaboration with Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited, is the first in a new class of ADCs commercially available globally in 67 countries for relapsed classical Hodgkin lymphoma and relapsed systemic anaplastic large cell lymphoma (sALCL). Seattle Genetics is also advancing enfortumab vedotin, an ADC for metastatic urothelial cancer, in a planned pivotal trial in collaboration with Astellas. Headquartered in Bothell, Washington, Seattle Genetics has a strong pipeline of innovative therapies for blood-related cancers and solid tumors designed to address significant unmet medical needs and improve treatment outcomes for patients. The company has collaborations for its proprietary ADC technology with a number of companies including AbbVie, Astellas, Bayer, Celldex, Genentech, GlaxoSmithKline and Pfizer. More information can be found at http://www.seattlegenetics.com

Forward Looking Statement for Genmab

This Company Announcement contains forward looking statements. The words believe, expect, anticipate, intend and plan and similar expressions identify forward looking statements. Actual results or performance may differ materially from any future results or performance expressed or implied by such statements. The important factors that could cause our actual results or performance to differ materially include, among others, risks associated with pre-clinical and clinical development of products, uncertainties related to the outcome and conduct of clinical trials including unforeseen safety issues, uncertainties related to product manufacturing, the lack of market acceptance of our products, our inability to manage growth, the competitive environment in relation to our business area and markets, our inability to attract and retain suitably qualified personnel, the unenforceability or lack of protection of our patents and proprietary rights, our relationships with affiliated entities, changes and developments in technology which may render our products obsolete, and other factors. For a further discussion of these risks, please refer to the risk management sections in Genmabs most recent financial reports, which are available on http://www.genmab.com. Genmab does not undertake any obligation to update or revise forward looking statements in this Company Announcement nor to confirm such statements in relation to actual results, unless required by law.

Genmab A/S and its subsidiaries own the following trademarks: Genmab; the Y-shaped Genmab logo; Genmab in combination with the Y-shaped Genmab logo; the DuoBody logo; the HexaBody logo; HuMax; HuMax-CD20; DuoBody; HexaBody and UniBody. Arzerra is a trademark of Novartis AG or its affiliates. DARZALEX is a trademark of Janssen Biotech, Inc.

Forward Looking Statement for Seattle Genetics

Certain of the statements made in this press release are forward looking, such as those, among others, relating to the therapeutic potential of tisotumab vedotin and its possible benefits and uses, and planned development activities including future clinical trials. Actual results or developments may differ materially from those projected or implied in these forward-looking statements. Factors that may cause such a difference include the inability to show sufficient activity and the risk of adverse events as tisotumab vedotin advances in clinical trials and regulatory actions. More information about the risks and uncertainties faced by Seattle Genetics is contained under the caption Risk Factors included in the companys Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2017 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.Seattle Genetics disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

Original post:
Genmab and Seattle Genetics to Co-develop Tisotumab Vedotin for Solid Tumors - Business Wire (press release)

Biochemistry Analyzers Market Overview, Industry Top Manufactures, Market Size, Industry Growth Analysis & Forecast … – DailyNewsKs

Biochemistry Analyzers Market Report covers the present scenario and the growth prospects of the Biochemistry Analyzers Industry for 2017-2022. Biochemistry Analyzers Market report analyses the industry potential for each geographical region based on the growth rate, macroeconomic parameters, consumer buying patterns, market demand and supply scenarios.

Biochemistry Analyzers Marketanalysis reports provide a valuable source of insightful data for business strategists and competitive analysis of Biochemistry Analyzers market. It provides the Biochemistry Analyzers industry overview with growth analysis and futuristic cost, revenue, demand and supply data. The research analysts provide an elaborate description of the value chain and its distributor analysis. This market study provides comprehensive data which enhances the understanding, scope and application of this report.

Browse Detailed TOC, Tables, Figures, Charts and Companies Mentioned in Biochemistry Analyzers Market Research Report@ http://www.360marketupdates.com/10979311

Biochemistry Analyzers Market Report provides comprehensive analysis of: Key market segments and sub-segments, evolving market trends and dynamics, changing supply and demand scenarios, Quantifying market opportunities through market sizing and market forecasting, Tracking current trends/opportunities/challenges, Competitive insights, Opportunity mapping in terms of technological breakthroughs

Major Manufacturers Analysis of Biochemistry Analyzers Market: URIT Medical Electronic, Rayto Life and Analytical Sciences, ELITechGroup, Rayto Life and Analytical Sciences, EKF Diagnostics, Shenzhen Genius Electronics, Spinreact, Mindray

Biochemistry Analyzers Market Regional Segment Analysis: North America, Europe, China, Japan, Southeast Asia, India

Biochemistry Analyzers Market Product Segment Analysis: Semi-Automatic Biochemical Analyzers, Automatic Analyzers, Type 3

Get Sample PDF of Biochemistry Analyzers Market Report @ https://www.360marketupdates.com/enquiry/request-sample/10979311

Biochemistry Analyzers Market Report Also Covers Marketing Strategy Analysis, Distributors/Traders & Market Effect Factors Analysis

Industrial Chain, Sourcing Strategy and Downstream Buyers of Biochemistry Analyzers Market: Biochemistry Analyzers Industrial Chain Analysis, Upstream Raw Materials Sourcing, Raw Materials Sources of Biochemistry Analyzers Major Manufacturers in 2015, Downstream Buyers

Biochemistry Analyzers Market: Marketing Strategy Analysis, Distributors/Traders

Marketing Channel: Direct Marketing, Indirect Marketing, Marketing Channel Development Trend included in Biochemistry Analyzers Market,

Market Positioning of Biochemistry Analyzers Market: Pricing Strategy, Brand Strategy, Target Client, Distributors/Traders List

Market Effect Factors Analysis: Technology Progress/Risk in Biochemistry Analyzers Market, Substitutes Threat, Technology Progress in Related Industry, Consumer Needs/Customer Preference Change, Economic/Political Environmental Change.

Any Query? Ask to our Expert @ https://www.360marketupdates.com/enquiry/pre-order-enquiry/10979311

Biochemistry Analyzers market report provides pin-point analysis for changing competitive dynamics. It provides a forward-looking perspective on different factors driving or restraining market growth. Biochemistry Analyzers market report provides a six-year forecast assessed on the basis of how the market is predicted to grow. This market report helps in understanding the key product segments and their future.

About 360 Market Updates:

360 Market Updates is the credible source for gaining the market research reports that will exponentially accelerate your business. We are among the leading report resellers in the business world committed towards optimizing your business. The reports we provide are based on a research that covers a magnitude of factors such as technological evolution, economic shifts and a detailed study of market segments.

Contact

Mr. Ameya Pingaley360 Market Updates

+1 408 520 9750Emailsales@360marketupdates.com

See original here:
Biochemistry Analyzers Market Overview, Industry Top Manufactures, Market Size, Industry Growth Analysis & Forecast ... - DailyNewsKs

Safer manufacturing through materials science – University at Buffalo Reporter

Imagine a thriving community built around manufacturing jobswhere the production methods and processes not only minimize wasteand mitigate negative environmental impacts, but also addresshealth risks posed to residents and workers.

How do we get there? Who needs to have a seat at the table?

A new partnership, facilitated by The JPB Foundation, aims toaddress these questions and more through the formation of theCollaboratory for a Regenerative Economy (CoRE). Led by UBsDepartment of Materials Design and Innovation (MDI), CoRE is acollaboration with Clean Production Action and Niagara Share.

CoRE will bring together scientists, manufacturers, communitypartners and other key stakeholders to understand the challenges inbuilding a self-sustaining economy in rapidly expanding andevolving industries.

This is an unusual project with its emphasis onthe interplay between science, technology, and their interactionwith human behavior to impact social change, says KrishnaRajan, Erich Bloch Endowed Chair of MDI.

While the initial focus of the project is on solar panelmanufacturing, the findings will serve as a testbed that can laterbe scaled and used for other industries.

Our project seeks to lower the barriers to the adoptionof production processes that are environmentally friendly and offerthe potential to improve community health, Rajan says.

We will use cutting-edge discoveries in materials scienceand engineering to develop innovative and transformative approachesto design data-driven, green-manufacturing processes that willreduce the use of toxic chemicals and/or those derived from fossilfuels in the solar panel manufacturing industry, hesays.

This data-driven approach to designing alternate materials forindustrial use will include human and environmental healthfactors.

Our aim is to not only reduce the use of harmfulchemicals in industrial production, but also reduce the healthhazards arising from the exposure to toxic chemicals, both duringproduction and when products are decommissioned, says MarkRossi, executive director of Clean Production Action, which isbased in Somerville, Massachusetts.

Since low-income families make up a significant portion of thefrontline communities that are impacted by industrial and energyproduction, the project aligns closely with The JPBFoundations focus on health and poverty.

This unique partnership among the academic researchcommunity, non-governmental and community outreach organizationsbrings together complementary expertise in research, marketanalysis, policy formulation and social innovation tosupport the transition toward a safer materials economy,says Liesl Folks, dean of the School of Engineering and AppliedSciences.

Key features of the CoRE initiative include industry andcommunity-targeted workshops, an MDI Summer Institute and atraineeship program that links MDI students with communityorganizations and other constituencies.

A change agent program will provide industry andcommunity leaders with the tools needed to understand and analyzethese technologies, the inherent risks and cost-benefits involved,and the best methods for adopting new approaches.

The project embraces both scientific advancements andsocial innovation, underlining the importance of bringing togetherpeople and resources in new, more effective ways to createresilient networks that can drive new innovation and value for ourcommunities, businesses and local economies, says AlexandraMcPherson, principal of Niagara Share, a Buffalo-basednonprofit.

Adds Robin Schulze, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences:This project aligns with MDIs core mission ofaddressing societal needs through significant acceleration ofdesign and discovery of new materials in a socially responsiblemanner.

UBs Department of Materials Design and Innovation is acollaboration between the College of Arts and Sciences and theSchool of Engineering and Applied Sciences.

Read more from the original source:
Safer manufacturing through materials science - University at Buffalo Reporter

Views Active-choice: An enrollment alternative worth considering – Employee Benefit Adviser (registration)

Advisers to retirement plans are familiar with the biggest challenge facing their retirement plan sponsor clients: How to motivate employees to participate?

Various enrollment methods have been developed to encourage participation and consider basic human behavior, but each carries tradeoffs. Standard enrollment and auto-enrollment have been widely adopted, but active-choice enrollment has been an area somewhat unexplored.

A traditional enrollment process allows participants to choose to participate in, or opt-in to, a retirement plan.

This method requires employee initiation. Unfortunately, when this decision is left entirely up to employees, some basic behaviors take over. These include loss aversion, present bias and procrastination.

Loss aversion happens when employees weigh out the costs and benefits of setting aside part of their paycheck every month to save for retirement. The perceived losses receive undue importance when compared with the expected benefits. In simpler terms, giving up income today is a bigger deal than receiving income in the future.

Present bias is this same idea of unequal importance of costs and benefits, but compounded by time. The costs are borne immediately and the benefits are not realized until much further in to the future. The delay in benefit when it comes to retirement savings is decades long. Employees may not be able to extrapolate their decisions this far into the future.

Procrastination will also come into play, causing decisions about saving for retirement to be put off until employees feel they make enough money to save, know enough about how much to save, or have enough time to make these crucial savings decisions.

These psychological forces are hard for all humans to overcome and the default of not enrolling in the retirement savings plan is, to many potential participants, the path of least resistance.

One solution to the motivation conundrum is the auto-enrollment process. This process allows a plan sponsor to automatically enroll eligible employees into the plan unless an employee affirmatively elects otherwise.

When employees do not have to act to be enrolled, participation can increase by up to 50% as compared to traditional enrollment, while giving employees the flexibility to not participate if they decide the retirement plan or automatic savings rate is not right for them.

However, many default savings rates prove to be sticky; participants consider them an implicit recommendation and are reluctant to stray from it. Default savings rates are most commonly set at 2-4%, which is not the optimal long-term savings rate for most participants. Loss aversion and present bias appear when participants weigh the costs and benefits of increasing savings above the default rate. Conversely, these same default savings rates may not be affordable for certain participants.

In addition to the psychological struggles that auto-enrollment presents, certain plan sponsors feel that auto-enrolling participants is too paternalistic. The politics of a plan sponsor taking the choice out of participation can be tricky or impossible to navigate.

A different pathActive-choice enrollment requires employees to actively make the decision to participate, or not, in their retirement plan.

This differs from the other enrollment processes, which allow participants to default into a state of participation. By mandating employees to decide, plan sponsors may better serve employees who might struggle with procrastination, and can offer more tailored engagement than an auto-enroll process may provide.

Start Slideshow

The retirement, technology, voluntary, wellness and overall winners are taking charge of the future of benefits.

Usually, the active choice is presented to employees along with other new-hire materials that must be completed or returned within a specified period. Employees decide between two options: Enroll or Waive; Yes, I want to participate or No, I do not want to participate, etc. If participants choose to participate, they are prompted to make contribution rate decisions immediately or in the near future.

By making the decision time-bound, employees are more likely to make an instant decision regarding their savings. This can result in a positive or negative effect. On the one hand, it starts employee saving as early as possible, maximizing compounding. Additionally, employees enrolled through active choice have been found to immediately choose a savings rate that took traditional enrolled participants more than two years to reach through contribution increases.

But the immediate decision can place unprepared employees in a situation where they are not informed enough to make the proper savings rate decision for their specific circumstance. Financially illiterate employees may be better served through a carefully chosen default savings rate and auto-enrollment.

Enhanced active voiceActive choice can be elaborated upon to include language that invokes an emotional response from potential participants. Known as enhanced active choice, this process adds descriptive language to the decision. Instead of choice between Enroll, or Waive, the participant must choose between such statements as Yes, I want to plan for a successful retirement by saving and investing money today. and No, I do not want to save today and understand that this choice may negatively affect my retirement.

This style of active choice taps into human instinct, highlighting the possible positive and negative effects of this choice in a visceral way. Plan sponsors who adopt enhanced active choice should be sure to not use language that implies any guarantee of success or failure.

The principles behind active-choice enrollment relieve many pain points that exist in other enrollment methods. Active-choice enrollment increases plan participation. By allowing employees to choose, plans will have more engaged, empowered participants. By requiring employees to choose for themselves, and making it easy to enroll, plans can help participants sidestep behavioral roadblocks and end up on track for a more successful retirement.

Go here to see the original:
Views Active-choice: An enrollment alternative worth considering - Employee Benefit Adviser (registration)

What Does It Take To See Gentrification Before It Happens? – NPR

Gentrification brings with it new restaurants, businesses and housing but often pushes out longtime residents. Jay Lazarin/Getty Images hide caption

Gentrification brings with it new restaurants, businesses and housing but often pushes out longtime residents.

Gentrification of neighborhoods can wreak havoc for those most vulnerable to change.

Sure, access to services and amenities rise in a gentrifying neighborhood. That is a good thing. But those amenities won't do you much good if you're forced to move because of skyrocketing housing costs.

That is why neighborhood and housing advocacy groups have spent decades searching for ways to protect longtime residents from the negative effects of gentrification.

But how can you tell if a neighborhood is gentrifying? Is it the art gallery that appears next to the bodegas? Is it the hipster coffee shop opening up where the old deli used to be? Maybe it's the expensive new condos rising up across from the older row houses? The problem with any of these obvious indicators is that by the time they appear, it may already be too late. The tide of living expenses in a given neighborhood may already be rising so fast that there is little that local groups, city planners or outside agencies can do. If you're poor or working class, it's just time to leave.

But what if there were a way to see gentrification long before the coffee shops, condos and Whole Foods appear? What if city planners and neighborhoods had an early warning system that could sniff out the changes just as they begin? In that way, cities might prepare for the coming changes securing a diverse range of housing options before land and rent prices shoot through the roof.

A neighborhood early warning system like this has been a dream for city planners for decades. The first versions of it stretch back as far as the 1980s. Now, though, with the rise of big data, this dream has taken a giant step forward toward becoming a reality. As with all things big data, however, taking that step comes with both considerable promise and peril.

Big data is a shorthand term for the insane amounts of information being generated by human beings in our digital world. From cellphones to credit card transactions to social media, we are all leaving digital contrails of almost all of our activity in the world. Learning how to harvest and analyze these digital traces en masse holds the promise of allowing data scientists to see how societies operate at a resolution that was simply impossible before. And seeing hidden patterns in gentrification may be exactly the kind of task big data and data science are best at.

So what does it take to see gentrification before it happens? The most obvious indicator is housing prices. Cities have always done a pretty good job of keeping track of property sales. That is why those records have, for many decades, been the primary data set for studies of neighborhood change. But big data has already swept through the housing price field, as apps like Zillow and Trulia allow anyone access to real estate information going back years. Using a data science technique called machine learning, computers can analyze patterns in these real estate records and extract future trends allowing companies to try to predict what your house will be worth next year.

But even if it works, this kind of "predictive analytics" for housing prices is too blunt an instrument to predict which neighborhoods might gentrify. To really develop an early warning system, data scientists need to go deeper into human behavior. Going deeper, however, means getting new kinds of data.

Evictions of both people and businesses might be one of the best representations of how gentrification negatively affects a neighborhood. But unlike real estate transactions, most cities do a terrible job of keeping track of who, where and why evictions are initiated. Getting that data used to mean a trip to city hall to dig through the musty records department. Because of this, evictions remain invisible to data scientists in their search for gentrification indicators.

A different kind of problem is faced by urban scientists who want to see who exactly is moving into, and out of, the neighborhoods. How does the economic and racial profile of a neighborhood change when gentrification occurs? Data from the U.S. census contains a wealth of information relevant to this question but it comes just once a decade. That is too slow to catch the details of a changing neighborhood. Social scientists also have what is called the American Community Survey, which is done every year. But it's a fraction of the size of the census and, like a bad cellphone camera, it doesn't have the resolution scientists need to see the spatial details of how neighborhoods change.

The difficulties in these tools limited earlier heroic attempts at building a neighborhood early warning system. But with big data, the situation has radically changed. Rather than asking a handful of people a few direct questions about their lives, these days we're all leaving volumes of answers about ourselves in the data we generate just, for example, by using our phones.

Consider a study from October 2015 that used Twitter to look at how residents of different neighborhoods moved around the city of Louisville, Ky. For generations, Louisville residents have seen Ninth Street as the boundary of the poorer African-American neighborhood to the west and wealthier white neighborhood to the east. But by carefully tracking tweets that were geotagged, meaning they contained location information, researchers could study mobility patterns of residents in the different neighborhoods. In particular, they found that Twitter users from the western neighborhoods were far more likely to be found in different regions of the city than residents of the eastern neighborhoods. In this way, the researchers found that the traditional boundaries of the neighborhoods could be redrawn based on the way people actually behaved rather than just "common wisdom."

The Louisville research highlights how studies of what is called "human mobility" can provide ground-truth insights into how neighborhoods function for the people who use them. In the future, perhaps, it will be possible to identify gentrifying neighborhoods by looking for unexpected patterns in how people travel into and out them on a daily basis. Studies of the mixing of ethic groups in Estonia tracked changes in neighborhood composition between the daytime and nighttime hours as well as weekday vs. weekend. By analyzing these patterns over months or years, it may be possible to see the "signal" of gentrification appear as people who normally would not be visiting a neighborhood begin making more frequent appearances.

With an early warning system in place, neighborhood advocates would have the opportunity to implement policies ranging from reserving affordable housing units to educating residents of their renting rights to helping small businesses negotiate long-term lease extensions.

And given that gentrification represents a small problem compared with existing urban poverty, early warning systems could also be applied to the other direction of neighborhood change. Using big data alongside traditional social science methods, it may be possible to identify neighborhoods at risk of decline. In this way, predictive analytics would let residents and city officials take steps to keep these at-risk neighborhoods healthy through early intervention in the availability of services or policing.

The methods of big data might even allow neighborhood equality to be crowdsourced. A recent study using data from cellphones and credit card transactions tracked shopping trips across a range of rich and poor neighborhoods in Spain. By rewiring just 5 percent of those shopping trips to more economically challenged neighborhoods, the researchers found income disparity could be significantly flattened. That means that by changing the destination of just 5 out of 100 of our shopping trips, we might all be a source for positive change.

But, as is becoming clear with everything to do with big data, while advances hold great promise for dealing with neighborhood change, they also hold significant peril. The great hope of urban advocates is to democratize data and its analysis tools, allowing residents and other stakeholders to see more clearly how a neighborhood is changing. But knowledge of those changes might act in a way that accelerates them. Seeing gentrification early may spur more development more quickly. Seeing neighborhoods decline early may provide more disincentive for investment.

As the first wave of optimism for big data passes, both researchers and users have become more realistic about its possibilities. But with eyes wide open, we may be at the beginning of seeing human communities in an entirely new way. From this new vantage point we will, hopefully, have new tools to ensure their health and well-being, even in the midst of change.

(Special thanks to Solomon Greene of the Urban Research Institute for his help with this post.)

Adam Frank is a co-founder of the 13.7 blog, an astrophysics professor at the University of Rochester, a book author and a self-described "evangelist of science." You can keep up with more of what Adam is thinking on Facebook and Twitter: @adamfrank4

Read more from the original source:
What Does It Take To See Gentrification Before It Happens? - NPR

Grey’s Anatomy: Catherine Almost Sidelined Bailey Over Karev’s Assault – TV Guide

Now PlayingGrey's Anatomy Deleted Scene: Catherine Almost Side-Lined Bailey Over Karev

It turns out Karev's (Justin Chambers) violent takedown of DeLuca (Giacomo Gioniotti) at the end of Season 12 had even more ramifications than fans knew.

TV Guide has obtained a deleted scene from the Grey's Anatomy Season 13 DVD set that reveals the fallout from Karev's arrest for DeLuca's beatdown almost got Bailey (Chandra Wilson) sidelined as Chief of Surgery. In the wake of Karev leaving the hospital in handcuffs, Catherine (Debbie Allen) came in guns blazing and questioned if Bailey was ready to do what needed to be done if their pediatric resident was being arrested for aggravated assault.

Bailey wasn't ready to fire Karev before finding out the full story, but she wasn't ready to let Catherine bring in someone else either -- thank God. We all know how it turned out later in the season when Catherine steamrolled Bailey into bringing someone else into the hospital (Hello, Minnick!). Bailey never did fire Karev, and that ended up working out for everyone, except maybe DeLuca.

Grey's Anatomy Mega Buzz: Are Maggie and Jackson Actually a Thing?

Luckily, Bailey is still sitting pretty as Chief of Surgery and everything seems to have worked out -- for now.

Grey's Anatomy returns with a two-hour premiere on Thursday, Sept. 28 at 8/7c on ABC.

Visit link:
Grey's Anatomy: Catherine Almost Sidelined Bailey Over Karev's Assault - TV Guide

Anatomy Lab LIVE returns to Cardiff and this is when you can see it – WalesOnline

A live show where the audience participate in a human dissection after tucking into a slap up meal is coming to Cardiff .

After selling out venues across the UK earlier this year, Anatomy Lab LIVE returns but even bigger, or even more disgusting, than ever before.

The show is a touring hands-on post-mortem suite, which serves a sumptuous two-course dinner to guests before the gory procedure begins.

Guests will will be given mortuary wear including protective surgical hats, masks and aprons as well as scalpels, scissors, forceps and bone saws before attempting a post mortem dissection, lead by the show's experts.

Those with a tough stomach will also be wined and dined, shortly before Samuel Piri and Scarlett Mellor will begin the dissection of VIVIT the world's only semi-synthetic human cadaver.

There will be an in-depth observation of various disease states before the mortuary technicians bring samples out into the audience for a closer look.

It will take place at The Village Hotel in Cardiff.

On Saturday, February 24.

The inner anatomy of the head including the cranial cavity, brain, spinal cord and the jaw.

The trachea, lungs, heart and diaphragm.

The digestive tract, including the stomach, liver, gall bladder, small intestine, large intestine, rectum and anus.

All of VIVITs organs come from pigs because of their anatomical similarities with humans.

Audiences will have the chance to put their questions to the anatomist and to leading medics who will be him on stage. Various samples will then be placed around the room in small pods where people will don surgical wear to dissect the samples revealing their internal structures.

You will get to:

There'll be an option of chicken or vegetarian.

Yes the event is for 16+.

Ticket prices start from 70 per person online from Eventbrite or you can buy a group ticket for six people for 430.

The cost includes a two-course sit down meal before the dissection starts. Vegetarian options can be requested in advance.

You can contact the box office on 01675 479818 Monday to Saturday 9am-8pm and Sundays from 10am-5pm.

Here is the original post:
Anatomy Lab LIVE returns to Cardiff and this is when you can see it - WalesOnline

Anatomy and physiology of ageing 8: the reproductive system – Nursing Times

Abstract

In men and in women, middle age brings about changes to the reproductive system that eventually lead to infertility although men stay fertile for longer. These changes are partly due to dramatic fluctuations in the production of sex hormones such as oestrogen, progesterone and testosterone. In the perimenopause and menopause, most women experience physical and psychological symptoms that can be extremely disruptive. Although less dramatic, the changes prompted in men by the andropause can lead to erectile dysfunction and a loss of libido. Article 8 in our series on the effects of ageing explores the changes occurring in the female and male reproductive systems, and the role of hormone replacement therapy.

Citation: Knight J, Nigam Y (2017) Anatomy and physiology of ageing 8: the reproductive system. Nursing Times [online]; 113: 9, 44-47.

Authors:John Knight is senior lecturer in biomedical science; Yamni Nigam is associate professor in biomedical science; both at the College of Human Health and Science, Swansea University.

Throughout the fertile years, the male and female reproductive organs (testes and ovaries) produce gametes (sperm and ova) which, through sexual intercourse, may fuse to form an embryo. The production of gametes is orchestrated by a cascade of hormones and growth factors, many of which have complex effects on the body. In middle and old age, the reproductive systems undergo significant changes: a gradual decline in fertility and fluctuations in the production of sex hormones, the latter triggering anatomical and physiological changes in distant organs and tissues. This article examines these changes and explores some of the treatments available to alleviate their consequences.

As women age, there is a progressive decline in the number of ovarian follicles, which gains speed in the fourth decade of life; the number and quality of ova diminish and oestrogen production declines, which in most women triggers the menopause around the age of 51. The speed of ovarian ageing is determined primarily by genetics, although oxidative stress, apoptosis and environmental factors also play a role. Premature ovarian failure (POF) can be triggered by surgery, radio- or chemotherapy, autoimmune reactions, and infections caused, for example, by the mumps virus and cytomegalovirus (Amanvermez and Tosun, 2016; Broekmans et al, 2009).

In women, the first episode of menstrual bleeding (menarche) marks the onset of puberty. The prime child-bearing years correspond to the period between menarche and perimenopause (Dutton and Rymer, 2015). Before the menopause, when menstruation ceases and women become infertile, the hormones that drive the menstrual cycle start to fluctuate. This perimenopausal phase, which can last 2-10 years, is often accompanied by increasing irregularity of the menstrual cycle. Although perimenopausal women are still fertile, pregnancy becomes more difficult.

The symptoms of the perimenopause are similar to those of the menopause. Some women experience few symptoms, but for others the perimenopause can be extremely challenging, since fluctuating hormone levels can cause physical and psychological symptoms such as hot flushes, night sweats, mood swings and feelings of sadness (Wagner, 2016).

The irregular menstrual cycles characteristic of the perimenopause eventually cease completely. Strictly speaking, the menopause is the cessation of periods for 12 months (Goodman et al, 2011). In most of the world it occurs in the early 50s, with some variation. Around 95% of women go through the menopause between 44 and 56 years, the average age being 50.7 (Freeman, 2015). Many factors that precipitate POF can also trigger early menopause (Dutton and Rymer, 2015). Since no more ova are being released, it is impossible for postmenopausal women to become pregnant without fertility treatment.

Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), secreted by the pituitary gland, drives the menstrual cycle. It stimulates the development of ovarian follicles, and as these enlarge they secrete the female sex hormone oestrogen. In perimenopausal and menopausal women, FSH levels remain high or are higher than in premenopausal women but FSH is unable to stimulate follicular development. Eventually, follicular activity ceases altogether, leading to a rapid decline in oestrogen secretion.

Similarly, luteinising hormone, which triggers ovulation, is secreted at normal or higher than normal levels (Burger et al, 2007), but without mature follicles, no ova can be released so menopausal women become infertile.

As during puberty and pregnancy, the transition to and through menopause is associated with dramatic fluctuations in the sex hormones oestrogen and progesterone. Symptoms are diverse and sometimes unique to the individual, but there are four that most women experience to varying degrees: hot flushes, vaginal dryness, mood changes and sleep disturbances (Santoro et al, 2015).

Hot flushesAround three in four women experience hot flushes in the perimenopause and menopause. They are described as a rapid heat increase, particularly in the face, neck and chest, often with sweating and palpitations. The length of time women experience them varies between 4 and 10 years; most experience them every day and a third have more than 10 a day (Committee on Practice Bulletins Gynecology, 2014).

Hot flushes appear to be related to increased levels of FSH and decreased levels of oestrogen. Decreased oestrogen seems to affect serotonin levels in the hypothalamus, causing fluctuations in the set point of the thermoregulatory centre; this leads to vasodilation and increased blood flow in the skin (Santoro et al, 2015).

Vaginal atrophy and drynessThe menopause is associated with a loss of elasticity and shrinkage in the length of the vagina. The epithelial lining becomes thinner and infiltrated by neutrophils, while the production of natural lubricating secretions slows down, increasing the risk of tears, bleeding and infection. In this changing environment, faecally derived species of bacteria may become dominant over the lactobacilli populations typically seen in premenopausal women. Lactobacilli produce lactic acid, so their depletion reduces the acidity of the vagina, resulting in a neutral or alkali pH that can encourage the growth of Candida albicans and other micro-organisms (Milsom, 2006). These vaginal changes can make sexual intercourse uncomfortable or painful (dyspareunia), and can reduce libido; 27-60% of menopausal women are affected by vaginal dryness and dyspareunia.

Menopausal woman are also at risk of urinary incontinence: the bladder and urethra are sensitive to oestrogen (both have oestrogen receptors), so it seems likely that decreased oestrogen levels contribute to urethral shrinkage and urinary incontinence (Santoro et al, 2015). Breast tissue is also oestrogen sensitive and women often notice a loss of supporting connective tissue in the breasts (Chahal and Drake, 2007); age-related skin thinning and loss of skin elasticity can exacerbate this.

Mood changes and depressionFluctuating concentrations of FSH, oestrogen and progesterone are often associated with mood changes. Despite inconsistencies in the literature, it is generally accepted that normal fluctuations in hormone levels whether in the premenstrual stage of the menstrual cycle, during pregnancy or in the perimenopausal years can be associated with negative psychological symptoms. The perimenopause is also associated with poor memory and concentration, problems with other people and low self-esteem. Other psychological symptoms are anxiety, irritability and rapid mood swings, but not necessarily low mood (Freeman, 2015; Cohen et al, 2005).

A previous history of depression or premenstrual syndrome is associated with an increased risk of clinical depression in the perimenopause and menopause. Women may also have pre-existing pathologies such as metabolic syndrome, osteoporosis or cardiovascular disease that are associated with depression and depressive symptoms. It is unclear if there is an increased risk of clinical depression in the perimenopause (Freeman, 2015), so clinical depression should not be regarded as a normal feature of either perimenopause or menopause.

Sleep disturbancesSleep problems become more common with age. In women, the risk of insomnia is 41% greater than in men. Around 25% of women aged 50-64 report sleep problems rising to 50% in postmenopausal women (Santoro et al, 2015; Ameratunga et al, 2012). Many reasons for sleep disturbances during the menopause have been suggested: hot flushes and night sweats, anxiety, depressive symptoms and sexual dysfunction (Jehan et al, 2015). Not all studies agree that the menopause is directly linked to sleep problems. A recent study showed no statistically significant differences in sleep quality between premenopausal and menopausal women (Tao et al, 2016).

Decreased bone healthReduced oestrogen levels can lead to a decrease in bone density and increased risk of fractures. Menopausal women lose up to 15% of their bone mass (Riggs and Melton, 1986). Significant losses in the spongy bone of the vertebrae contribute to the curvature of the spine often seen in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis.

Shrinkage in the length of the Fallopian tubes, loss of ciliated epithelia and loss of mucosa have been reported (Hwang and Song, 2004). Since the Fallopian tubes are the site of fertilisation and are responsible for transporting the fertilised ovum to the uterus, these changes contribute to the age-related reduction in fertility, and may explain why older women are at increased risk of ectopic pregnancy (Bouyer et al, 2003).

The endometrium is the inner mucosal layer of the uterus that is shed during menstruation and then rebuilt under the influence of oestrogens. When oestrogen production decreases, this rebuilding is gradually compromised, until it becomes impossible and menstruation ceases.

The myometrium, the middle layer of the uterus, is composed almost entirely of smooth muscle fibres. In childbirth its contractions push the baby through the birth canal. In the menopause, it begins to shrink. Oestrogen helps to maintain the myometrium, so its reduction is thought to contribute to the loss of smooth muscle fibres although the mechanisms of myometrial atrophy remain unclear (Mwampagatwa et al, 2013).

The perimetrium the thin outer serous layer of the uterus appears to change little with age.

The cervix (neck of the womb) consists of a smooth muscle layer overlaid by a mucus-producing cervical epithelium. Cervical mucus is essential to female fertility, aiding sperm to pass through the cervical aperture and enhancing sperm motility and maturation. The menopause is associated with a reduction in cervical secretions which contributes to reducing fertility (Gorodeski, 2000).

Most men show an age-related reduction in testicular mass (Chahal and Drake, 2007) with an associated reduction in testosterone and sperm production. Since spermatozoa are produced in huge numbers, most men remain fertile until their 80s and 90s, although erectile dysfunction (ED) may be a problem. The sperm ducts, which carry sperm from the testes during ejaculation, gradually become less elastic because of an accumulation of collagen (sclerosis).

The secretions from the seminal vesicles and prostate gland, which form the semen in which sperm swim, decrease with age, so the volume of ejaculate is reduced. Due to the parallel decrease in sperm numbers, sperm concentration remains fairly constant, which helps maintain male fertility. Secretions from the prostate contain antibacterial factors, so their decrease may increase the risk of urinary tract infection.

A common age-related problem is benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH), a gradual, non-malignant increase in the size of the prostate contributing to age-related micturition difficulties. BPH may cause symptoms that are similar to those of prostate cancer, so investigations may be needed to rule out malignancy.

Although most men do not experience the profound physiological and psychological changes that many women go through, they do undergo hormonal changes indicative of the so-called andropause often inaccurately referred to as the male menopause (Chahal and Drake, 2007). In their 30s, men start to experience a decline in serum testosterone levels of around 1-1.4% per year. This is thought to be due to a reduction in the number of interstitial cells that synthesise testosterone and a reduced availability of free testosterone in the blood (Matsumoto, 2002).

Compared with the literature on the perimenopause and menopause, there is little research on the andropause. Reduced testosterone levels are associated with various physiological and psychological changes:

Reduced testosterone levels can cause the penis to shrink, both in its flaccid and erect states. However, in most men, the earliest symptom of the andropause is a loss of libido, often accompanied with problems achieving an erection and maintaining it to the point of orgasm. The number of erections decreases and weaker erections become more common. Men who smoke or have pre-existing pathologies such as diabetes, blood pressure problems or atherosclerotic occlusion are at higher risk of ED. Today, ED can be treated by techniques such as counselling and medications such as sildenafil (Viagra) (Bansal, 2013).

Some effects of the perimenopause and menopause can be alleviated by hormone replacement therapy (HRT) usually either oestrogen alone or oestrogen and progesterone given orally or transdermally. HRT has been reported to be effective in:

Treating osteoporosis and reducing the risk of bone fractures;

HRT carries certain risks and there is growing evidence that HRT (particularly oestrogen plus progesterone) increases the risk of breast cancer (Sood et al, 2014). Evidence of other risks of HRT is conflicting.

There has been much research into the benefits and risks of HRT in women, but HRT in men going through the andropause has received less attention. Recent research has shown that testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) can have positive effects (Sofiajidpour et al, 2015).

However, increasing the level of circulating testosterone is associated with a variety of side-effects and risks including oily skin, acne, increased haematocrit count, gynaecomastia (breast tissue development) and increased risk of prostate cancer. The effect of TRT on cardiovascular health remains unclear (Nandy et al, 2008).

The ageing of the reproductive tracts, and the changes and symptoms brought about by the menopause and andropause, are inevitable. However, certain lifestyle changes may delay, or reduce the effects of the menopause or andropause although some of the evidence is contradictory.

Smoking is the main modifiable risk factor. The inhalation of cigarette smoke increases the risk of infertility and early menopause in women, and the same risks exist for women exposed to second-hand smoking (Hyland et al, 2016). In men, smoking increases the risk of ED and lowers sperm count and quality (Sengupta and Nwagha, 2014).

A low body mass index (BMI) and being undernourished are both associated with an earlier menopausal onset. The effect of an increased BMI is less clear: some studies show that it is linked with a later menopausal onset (Akahoshi et al, 2002), others suggest no influence (Hardy et al 2008). A high BMI and obesity seem to be associated with more severe hot flushes and other perimenopausal symptoms (Saccomani et al, 2017). In men, a high BMI is associated with lower circulating testosterone levels, which can exacerbate the effects of the andropause (Bansal, 2013).

Akahoshi M et al (2002) The effects of body mass index on age at menopause. International Journal of Obesity and Related Metabolic Disorders; 26: 7, 961-968.

Amanvermez R, Tosun M (2016) An update on ovarian aging and ovarian reserve tests. International Journal of Fertility and Sterility; 9: 4, 411-415.

Ameratunga D et al (2012) Sleep disturbance in menopause. Internal Medicine Journal; 42: 7, 742-747.

Bansal VP (2013) Andropause, a clinical entity. Journal of Universal College of Medical Sciences; 1: 2, 54-68.

Bouyer J et al (2003) Risk factors for ectopic pregnancy: a comprehensive analysis based on a large case-control, population-based study in France. American Journal of Epidemiology; 157: 3, 185-194.

Broekmans FJ et al (2009) Ovarian aging: mechanisms and clinical consequences. Endocrine Reviews; 30: 5, 465-493.

Burger HG et al (2007) A review of hormonal changes during the menopausal transition: focus on findings from the Melbourne Womens Midlife Health Project. Human Reproduction Update; 13: 6, 559-565.

Chahal HS, Drake WM (2007) The endocrine system and ageing. Journal of Pathology; 211: 2, 173-180.

Cohen LS et al (2005) Diagnosis and management of mood disorders during the menopausal transition. American Journal of Medicine. 118(Suppl 12B), 93-97.

Committee on Practice Bulletins Gynecology (2014) Management of menopausal symptoms. Obstetrics and Gynecology; 123: 1, 202-216.

Dutton PJ, Rymer JM (2015) Physiology of the menstrual cycle and changes in the perimenopause. In: Panay N et al (eds) Managing the Menopause: 21st Century Solutions. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Freeman EW (2015) Depression in the menopause transition: risks in the changing hormone milieu as observed in the general population. Womens Midlife Health; 1: 2, 1-11.

Goodman NF et al (2011) American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists Medical Guidelines for Clinical Practice for the diagnosis and treatment of menopause. Endocrine Practice; 17(Suppl6): 1-25.

Gorodeski GI (2000) Effects of menopause and estrogen on cervical epithelial permeability. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism; 85: 7, 2584-2595.

Hardy R et al (2008) Body mass index trajectories and age at menopause in a British birth cohort. Maturitas; 59: 4, 304-314.

Hwang TS, Song J (2004) Morphometrical changes of the human uterine tubes according to aging and menstrual cycle. Annals of Anatomy; 186: 3, 263-269.

Hyland A et al (2016) Associations between lifetime tobacco exposure with infertility and age at natural menopause: the Womens Health Initiative Observational Study. Tobacco Control; 25: 6, 706-714.

Jakiel G et al (2015) Andropause state of the art 2015 and review of selected aspects. Menopause Review; 14: 1, 1-6.

Jehan S et al (2015) Sleep disorders in postmenopausal women. Journal of Sleep Disorders and Therapy; 4: 5, 1000212.

Matsumoto AM (2002) Andropause: clinical implications of the decline in serum testosterone levels with aging in men. Journals of Gerontology. Series A, Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences; 57: 2, M76-99.

Milsom I (2006) Menopause-related symptoms and their treatment. In: Erkkola R (ed) European Practice in Gynaecology and Obstetrics. No 9. The Menopause. Edinburgh: Elsevier.

Mwampagatwa IH et al (2013) Morpho-physiological features associated with menopause: recent knowledge and areas for future work. Tanzania Journal of Health Research; 15: 2, 93-101.

Nandy PR (2008) Male andropause: a myth or reality. Medical Journal Armed Forces India; 64: 3, 244-249.

National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (2017) Benefits and risks of hormone replacement therapy.

Riggs BL, Melton LJ (1986) Involutional osteoporosis. New England Journal of Medicine; 314: 26, 1676-1686.

Saccomani S et al (2017) Does obesity increase the risk of hot flashes among midlife women? A population-based study. Menopause [Epub].

Santoro et al (2015) Menopausal symptoms and their management. Endocrinology and Metabolisn Clinics of North America; 44: 3, 497-515.

Sengupta P, Nwagha U (2014) The aging sperm: is the male reproductive capacity ticking to biological extinction? Journal of Basic and Clinical Reproductive Sciences; 3: 1, 1-7.

Sofimajidpour H et al (2015) The effect of testosterone on men with andropause. Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal; 17: 12, e19406.

Sood R et al (2014) Prescribing menopausal hormone therapy: an evidence-based approach. International Journal of Womens Health; 6: 47-57.

Tao MF et al (2016) Poor sleep in middle-aged women is not associated with menopause per se. Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research; 49: 1, e4718.

Wagner D (2016) Perimenopause: The untold story. Obstetrics and Gynecology International Journal; 5: 1, 00139.

Read the original here:
Anatomy and physiology of ageing 8: the reproductive system - Nursing Times

M v F & SM (Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008) [2017] EWHC 2176 (Fam) (23 August 2017) – Family Law Week

Home > Judgments

Case summary coming soon

Neutral Citation Number: [2017] EWHC 2176 (Fam)Case No: LE17P00251IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICEFAMILY DIVISIONBirmingham Civil Justice CentreB4 6DS

Date: 23/08/2017

Before :

MR. JUSTICE KEEHAN- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Between :

M Applicant- and - F 1st RespondentSM2nd Respondent- and -A (BY HIS GUARDIAN)3rd Respondent

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Andrew Powell (instructed by JMW Solicitors LLP) for the The ApplicantThe 1st Respondent did not attend and was not representedKatherine Duncan (instructed by Mills & Reeve) for the The 2nd RespondentMartin Kingerley (instructed by CAFCASS) for the The 3rd Respondent

Hearing dates: 4th July 2017- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Judgment Approved

MR. JUSTICE KEEHAN

This judgment was delivered in private. The judge has given leave for this version of the judgment to be published on condition that (irrespective of what is contained in the judgment) in any published version of the judgment the anonymity of the children and members of their family must be strictly preserved. All persons, including representatives of the media, must ensure that this condition is strictly complied with. Failure to do so will be a contempt of court.

Mr. Justice Keehan : INTRODUCTION1.In early 2017 A was born. His biological parents are the applicant, M and the first respondent, F. His legal parents are, however, the second respondent, SM and F, although he does not have parental responsibility for the child.

2.A was born as a result of a gestational surrogacy arrangement between the applicant and the first respondent. Their gametes were used to create an embryo that was then implanted in the second respondent on 29 May 2016. Immediately upon his birth the second respondent surrendered care of A to the applicant.

3.During the course of the second respondent's pregnancy, the relationship between the applicant and the first respondent ended. Unless the law is changed to permit applications for parental orders by a single applicant, the applicant will not be entitled to obtain this transformative order to become A's legal as well as biological parent.

4.In order to provide stability for the child and some legal status for the applicant, the court made A a Ward of Court on 28 February 2017, granted care and control of him to the applicant and prohibited the first respondent from removing the child from her care. The order contained the following recital:

"And Upon the court reading the letter of the first respondent dated 24 February 2017, in which the first respondent indicates that he has taken the decision not to be involved in these proceedings or the child's upbringing."

5.The matter was then listed before me for directions on 12 April 2017 and further on 4 July when the parties invited me to give this judgment.

BACKGROUND6.For the purposes of this judgment I can set out the background to this case very briefly. The applicant and the first respondent began a relationship in 2011. They wished to have children but for medical reasons the applicant was unable to conceive. A cycle of IVF treatment, funded by the NHS, was unsuccessful and the couple could not afford to pay privately for further IVF treatment.

7.The applicant and first respondent then considered surrogacy and were delighted when the friend of a family member volunteered to be a surrogate for them.

8.In 2015 they engaged a fertility clinic to assist them. Once all the necessary formalities had been completed an embryo was created using the applicant's and first respondent's gametes. The second respondent was implanted with the embryo on 29 May 2016.

9.During the course of the pregnancy the relationship between the applicant and the first respondent deteriorated and finally they separated before A's birth. I do not propose to include in this judgment how or why they separated.

10.Since A's birth the second respondent has surrendered his care to the applicant. She has no wish to be involved in the upbringing of A and would be content for a parental order to be made in favour of the applicant if that route was in law available to her. She would support A remaining in the care of the applicant and any orders which would terminate her parental responsibility for him or prohibit her from exercising her parental responsibility.

11.The first respondent has played no role whatsoever in A's life. He has not seen him. As noted above he does not wish to be involved in his child's upbringing. He is, of course, the only biological and legal parent that A has, as matters stand.

12.The applicant is in the process of issuing an application for a parental order within six months of A's birth. She recognises that the application will be stayed pending a change in the law following on from the President's declaration of incompatibility in Re Z (A Child) (No.2): see below.

THE LAW13.A parental order made pursuant to s.54 of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 ('the 2008 Act') provides for the child to be treated in law as the child of the applicants. The order may be made if the conditions set out in s.54 of the 2008 Act are satisfied.

14.The act provides that:

(1) On an application made by two people ("the applicants"), the court may make an order providing for a child to be treated in law as the child of the applicants if

(a) the child has been carried by a woman who is not one of the applicants, as a result of the placing in her of an embryo or sperm and eggs or her artificial insemination,

(b) the gametes of at least one of the applicants were used to bring about the creation of the embryo, and

(c) the conditions in subsections (2) to (8) are satisfied.

(2)The applicants must be

(a) husband and wife,

(b) civil partners of each other, or

(c) two persons who are living as partners in an enduring family relationship and are not within prohibited degrees of relationship in relation to each other.

(3) Except in a case falling within subsection (11), the applicants must apply for the order during the period of 6 months beginning with the day on which the child is born.

(4) At the time of the application and the making of the order

(a) the child's home must be with the applicants, and

(b) either or both of the applicants must be domiciled in the United Kingdom or in the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man.

(5) At the time of the making of the order both the applicants must have attained the age of 18.

(6) The court must be satisfied that both

(a) the woman who carried the child, and

(b) any other person who is a parent of the child but is not one of the applicants (including any man who is the father by virtue of section 35 or 36 or any woman who is a parent by virtue of section 42 or 43),have freely, and with full understanding of what is involved, agreed unconditionally to the making of the order.

(7) Subsection (6) does not require the agreement of a person who cannot be found or is incapable of giving agreement; and the agreement of the woman who carried the child is ineffective for the purpose of that subsection if given by her less than six weeks after the child's birth.

(8) The court must be satisfied that no money or other benefit (other than for expenses reasonably incurred) has been given or received by either of the applicants for or in consideration of

(a) the making of the order,

(b) any agreement required by subsection (6),

(c) the handing over of the child to the applicants, or

(d) the making of arrangements with a view to the making of the order,unless authorised by the court.

15.For the purposes of this judgment the relevant statutory provisions of s.54 are:

i)s.54(1) which requires the application to be made by two people;

ii)s.54(2) which requires the applicants to be either husband and wife, or civil partners or persons who are living as partners in an enduring family relationship; and

iii)s.54(4)(a) which requires that the child's home must be with the applicants.

16.In Re Z (A Child: Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act: Parental Order) [2015] EWFC 73 the President declined to read down the provisions of s.54 of the 2008 Act to permit an application for a parental order by a single applicant.

17.In Re Z (A Child) (No.2) [2016] EWHC 1191 (Fam), [2016] 2 FLR 327, the President made a declaration of incompatibility in respect of s.54 in the following terms at paragraph 17 "sections 54(1) and (2) of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 are incompatible with the rights of the Applicant and the Second Respondent under Article 14 ECHR taken in conjunction with Article 8 insofar as they prevent the Applicant form obtaining a parental order on the sole ground of his status as a single person as opposed to being part of a couple."

18.The transformative legal effect of a parental order cannot be overstated. The only alternatives are:

i)An adoption order, but, on the facts, it would be inappropriate for the biological mother to become in law the adoptive mother of her own child in order to gain the status of being the child's legal parent; or

ii)Making the child a ward of court, granting and control of the child to the applicant and making such ancillary orders as to minimise the number of occasions the applicant would have to apply to the court: see Re Z (A Child) (No. 2) above and the judgment of the President at paragraph 7. But these collections of orders do not make the applicant the legal parent of the child.

19.In Re X (A Child) (Surrogacy: Time Limit) [2014] EWHC 3135 (Fam) the President said at paragraph 54

54. Section 54 goes to the most fundamental aspects of status and, transcending even status, to the very identity of the child as a human being: who he is and who his parents are. It is central to his being, whether as an individual or as a member of his family. As Ms Isaacs correctly puts it, this case is fundamentally about Xs identity and his relationship with the commissioning parents. Fundamental as these matters must be to commissioning parents they are, if anything, even more fundamental to the child. A parental order has, to adopt Theis J's powerful expression, a transformative effect, not just in its effect on the child's legal relationships with the surrogate and commissioning parents but also, to adopt the guardian's words in the present case, in relation to the practical and psychological realities of X's identity. A parental order, like an adoption order, has an effect extending far beyond the merely legal. It has the most profound personal, emotional, psychological, social and, it may be in some cases, cultural and religious, consequences. It creates what Thorpe LJ in Re J (Adoption: Non-Patrial) [1998] INLR 424, 429, referred to as "the psychological relationship of parent and child with all its far-reaching manifestations and consequences." Moreover, these consequences are lifelong and, for all practical purposes, irreversible: see G v G (Parental Order: Revocation) [2012] EWHC 1979 (Fam), [2013] 1 FLR 286, to which I have already referred. And the court considering an application for a parental order is required to treat the child's welfare throughout his life as paramount: see in In re L (A Child) (Parental Order: Foreign Surrogacy) [2010] EWHC 3146 (Fam), [2011] Fam 106, [2011] 1 FLR 1143. X was born in December 2011, so his expectation of life must extend well beyond the next 75 years. Parliament has therefore required the judge considering an application for a parental order to look into a distant future.

20.I respectfully agree.

DISCUSSION21.Following the President's declaration of incompatibility in Re Z (A Child) (No. 2) above, the Government is actively considering the terms of a remedial order to address the incompatibility identified in that case: see paragraph 17 above.

22.The applicant earnestly hopes that that the terms of the remedial order will be such that she will be able to apply for a parental order. This 'transformative' order would enable her to be a legal parent of A.

23.In the meantime I am satisfied that it is in A's welfare best interests for the court to approve the continuation of the wardship and the grant of care and control in respect of him to the applicant.

24.In giving this judgment I have well in mind the words of the President in Re Z (A child) (No. 2) where at paragraph 26-28 and 30 he said

26. They submit that the use of the remedial power under section 10 is "appropriate and necessary in this case because it would ensure that [the father] could apply for a parental order with minimum delay, and would prevent Z remaining in a legally vulnerable position for any longer than is absolutely necessary."

27. Going even further, they invite me to "pass comment (by way of obiter dicta) about the merits of Parliamentary review of the scheme of section 54" and to "express any view as to the desirability or necessity for future reform as may be considered appropriate.

28. I absolutely decline to do any of this.29. On behalf of the Secretary of State, Miss Broadfoot and Miss Gartland understandably counsel great caution. First, they point out correctly as it seems to me that there are various different ways in which the discriminatory effect of the present legislation could be cured. Secondly, they observe that this is an area of social policy in relation to a matter surrogacy which is controversial. Thirdly, they submit, and I agree, that it is constitutionally a matter for the legislature to determine its response. Fourthly, they submit, and again I agree, that it is entirely a matter for the government to decide whether or not to utilise the Ministerial power under section 10. It is important to note the language of section 10(2). It is a matter for "a Minister", therefore not for a judge, to "consider" whether there are "compelling reasons." Moreover, as they point out, the court can be in no position to know whether such compelling reasons exist, as this may depend upon a number of factors of which the court can have no knowledge or in respect of which it may be lacking in relevant expertise. Fifthly, and finally, they caution that any observations I might be tempted to make may have unintended implications and unforeseen consequences."

25.Once again, I respectfully agree.

Read the original here:
M v F & SM (Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008) [2017] EWHC 2176 (Fam) (23 August 2017) - Family Law Week