Birth defects rise in China (AFP) Updated: 2006-09-21 07:07
BEIJING - A rising incidence of birth defects in some parts of China is being
attributed to environmental pollution, unhealthy lifestyles and poor nutrition.
The trend has led some experts to debate the reintroduction of
compulsory pre-marital health checks which were scrapped in 2003, the Xinhua
news agency reported.
Figures released by two populous provinces in advance of the publication of
national figures by the Ministry of Health next week show alarming rises in the
number of birth defects, according to Xinhua.
In east China's Zhejiang province, the incidence of babies with birth defects
was 1.15 percent in 2003, rising to 1.33 percent in 2004 and 1.47 percent last
year, the report said.
About 480,000 babies are born in Zhejiang each year, with about 7,200 babies
born with defects in 2005, it added.
In the southern province of Guangdong, the incidence has risen from 0.96
percent 10 years ago to 2.12 percent in the latest figures.
Cleft palette, neural tube defects, excessive numbers of fingers or toes,
congenital heart disease and water on the brain are the top five birth defects
among Chinese babies, the report said.
Experts said hereditary diseases, viral infections, environmental pollution,
unhealthy lifestyles and poor nutrition were among the main known causes.
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