commentComment (2) | emailEmail | printPrint | del.icio.usdel.icio.us | technoratiTechnorati | Share
Carolyn Moynihan | Thursday, 13 November 2008

New US law may see more Down syndrome babies survive

Sammy and John Loudon. Picture: Elie Gardner /P-DA new federal law in the United States affecting babies with Down syndrome has been welcomed by people who believe there has been too much emphasis on diagnosis of the condition and not enough good information and support offered to parents. The Prenatally and Postnatally Diagnosed Conditions Awareness Act, also known as the Kennedy-Brownback Act after its sponsors in the Senate, requires medical professionals to provide accurate information on the outcomes of people with Down syndrome and inform mothers with a Down diagnosis of their child about adoption resources. Signed into law in October, it applies also to conditions such as spina bifida, cystic fibrosis and dwarfism.

Among those who backed the law is Missouri senator John Loudon, who sponsored similar legislation in his state. He and his wife Gina decided to adopt a baby with Down syndrome as their third child, and found there were far more parents wanting children with Down than there were children with the condition. However, they did manage to adopt Sammy, now three years old. Currently about 250 prospective adoptive parents are registered with the Down Syndrome Association of Greater Cincinnati, a national advocate of adoption.

All the same, there are doctors who think that providing information about adoption when it’s not asked for might appear biased and judgemental to a patient, and that a baby with Down may be hard to adopt. Studies indicate that 80 to 90 per cent of parents who receive a pre-natal diagnosis of Down choose to abort the child, leading to an 8 per cent decline in people with Down in the US in the past two decades. The trend is to extended pre-natal testing to all pregnant women, not just those over 35 who are at greater risk.

Proponents of the federal law mobilised after two landmark studies by Harvard medical student Brian Skotko were published in 2005. Skotko, who has an adult sister with Down syndrome, surveyed 3000 parents of children with the disorder about how the diagnosis was delivered. In most cases the news began with the words, “I’m sorry,” and got worse from there. Information given was “inaccurate, incomplete and sometimes insensitive,” Skotko found. “It was in no way consistent with the advancements and possibilities and support we’ve seen.” ~ St Louis Post-Dispatch, Nov 9

commentComment (2) | emailEmail | printPrint | del.icio.usdel.icio.us | technoratiTechnorati | Share

What do you think? Sound off! Our guidelines: be concise; stay on-topic; and don't lose your temper! Comments close after 2 weeks. So far there have been 2 comments

Name:
Email:
Location:
URL:
0/2000
Remember my personal information
Notify me of follow-up comments?
Type the characters you see in the image below:

Paxil defects said... United States | Fri, 12 Dec 2008 at 6:36 pm

Good to know that the abortion rate of babies with down syndrome is going to come down now.Good to know that.


Sjs information said... United States | Thu, 27 Nov 2008 at 5:06 pm

I too think that the abortion rate of such babies is going to come down now.Good to know that.


Page 1 of 1 :

freeupdates

Email

frontpage rss

Darwinism 2.0 has all the answers Euphoria is no excuse for sloppy thinking in the world's most influential news magazine, The EconomistMichael Cook | 10 Jan 2009

Battered by bleak midwinter blues? Try poetry The Victorian poet Francis Thompson, an Irish coffee and a good fire are the best way to beat Seasonal Affective Disorder.  Francis Phillips | 9 Jan 2009

Walking in a demographic winter wonderland Why are people averting their eyes from the coming collapse of population growth?
Jennifer Roback Morse | 8 Jan 2009

Seal pup silliness Regulations are piled upon regulations in Canada about killing seal pups, but there is no law about abortion.  Michelle Martin | 7 Jan 2009

Hamas and the Arab States The view of the Israeli invasion of Gaza from the Arab palace is quite different from the view on the Arab street. Kamran Bokhari and Reva Bhalla | 7 Jan 2009

Power play Reconnecting to the power grid is not child's play in Nigeria. Especially when you own the grid.
Nwachukwu Egbunike | 7 Jan 2009

A reform-minded education secretary? Barack Obama's choice for education secretary offers hope for a change in America's schools. Dan Lips | 6 Jan 2009

The educational reform we need most Smarter teachers? More parental involvement? More computers? Better assessment? Healthier lunches? Nope. Try harder-working kids.  Kevin Ryan | 5 Jan 2009

Gays angered by Pope’s stand on ecology If we don't trash the physical environment, do we have a right to trash the moral environment? Michael Cook | 2 Jan 2009

Liberty Forum better than U.N. Rights Council A former US diplomat argues that it is time for nations that truly respect human rights, to ditch the UNHRC for a body that promotes true rights. Kim Holmes | 2 Jan 2009

more...

rss del.icio.us technorati digg sitemap invite