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VOA标准英语2009年-Numbers of Premature Births Rising

时间:2009-10-30 06:51:00

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By Carol Pearson
Washington, D.C.
08 October 2009

 
A premature1 infant getting specialized2 hospital assistance after birth
A new study shows that more than a million babies die each year because they are born too soon, and that the highest rates of preterm births are in Africa followed by North America. VOA looks at the causes and sometimes devastating3 results of being born prematurely4.

Losing a baby is not supposed to happen. Dianne Lovett lost twins. "It's very hard to lose a child," she said between tears.

Parents of some 13 million preterm babies born around the world face the uncertainty5 of whether their babies will live long enough to go home from the hospital.

Chris Hausen, with the March of Dimes6, an organization to that promotes healthy births, says nearly 10 percent of all babies are born prematurely, and preterm births account for nearly one-third of newborn deaths. "In this report, we document for the very first time the global toll7 of preterm birth which is just severe and remarkable8 to us,” he told us. “We're talking about 13 million babies born every year preterm. Over a million of those dying every year as a result of being born preterm."

 
Chris Hausen, March of Dimes
Hausen says the number of preterm births is increasing. More than 85 percent of the world's early births happen in Africa. "Probably the factors that contribute to the high rates in Africa are mired9 in the poverty in the region and the weak health systems. The fact that women are malnourished before pregnancy10 and during pregnancy, they (also) have high rates of infectious diseases," Hausen explained.

In the United States, the reasons are quite different: more women over the age of 35 are having babies. They are also more likely to use in-vitro fertilization, a procedure which can result in multiple births and a greater likelihood these babies will be born prematurely.

Experts say every week a baby stays in the womb makes a difference. At 24 weeks gestation11, nearly 50 percent of preterm babies can survive. At 25 to 26 weeks, the survival rate goes up to 70 percent.

But there is more at stake than just a successful delivery. Nine-year-old Heather Croy was born at 24 weeks, weighing less than three-quarters of a kilogram. "I lived. And, they thought I'd die – but that wasn't going to happen," she said defiantly12.

Heather speaks softly because her vocal13 cords were damaged by the breathing tube she had for three years. But she does not have complications that other premature babies often experience: learning disabilities and serious lifelong health problems such as cerebral14 palsy, blindness and hearing loss. 
Currently, there is no reliable way to prevent a preterm birth. But the March of Dimes says a lot can be done to reduce the rates of death and disability.

The report's authors say more needs to be done to educate health care workers, policy makers15 and women themselves about high risk pregnancies16 and caring for pre-term babies.


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