Alaska tops birth defects national average


ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Jul 17, 2008 (UPI via COMTEX) -- Babies born in Alaska are
twice as likely to be born with major birth defects as babies in the 49 other
states, a state health department study indicates.

State officials say they're at a loss to explain why all races of Alaskans top
national rates for "major congenital anomalies," based on a review of data from
1996 through 2002 drawn from the Alaska Birth Defect Registry, the Anchorage
Daily News reported.

Rates were especially high among Alaska Natives, for whom birth defects were
reported in 10.5 percent of all live births, compared to 6 percent for all
Alaskans, the statistics indicated. Among white Alaskans the rate was 4 percent.
Among all Americans the rate was 3 percent.

Congenital heart problems lead all other types of birth defects in Alaska, just
as they do nationwide, the study reported.

Alaska public health officials long suspected Alaskan infants suffer higher
rates of birth defects, said Janine Schoellhorn, an analyst in the state's
Maternal and Child Health Epidemiology unit.

"This is the first time we've been able to produce estimates that we are
confident in publishing -- because we now have several years of data,"
Schoellhorn said.



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Copyright 2008 by United Press International

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