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According to the March of Dimes, "In 2001, more than 476,000 babies, or nearly 12 percent of live births, were born too soon – before 37 completed weeks – in the U.S.

“The annual rate of babies born prematurely has risen 27 percent since 1981... In 2000, hospital charges for 23,000 prematurity-related infant stays totaled $1.2 Billion. The average charge was $58,000 per baby, compared to $4,300 for a typical [term] newborn stay."1
[¹ Derived from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample for 2000, a component of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project. The diagnosis code includes short gestation and low birthweight]

Treatment of these children through employer health plans has been estimated at $4.7 Billion per year.

One fifth of these costs may be attributable to extra cases of prematurity arising from abortion-related morbidity.

premature birth is the leading cause of newnatal death and is related to increased risk of cerebral palsy, vision and hearing loss, retardation, and other life-long health problems.

For the list of 60 medical studies showing abortion's link to premature birth and low birth rate deliveries, visit http://www.vcn.bc.ca/~whatsup/APB-Major.html
[http://www.marchofdimes.com/aboutus/791_6775.asp]

 
Cytomegalovirus PDF Print E-mail

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) -- A herpes infection that causes serious illness in people with AIDS. CMV can develop in any part of the body but most often appears in the retina of the eye, the nervous system, the colon or the esophagus.

In pregnant women, a mononucleosis-like symptom may occur. May be spread to pregnant mother through saliva from small children. Frequent careful washing of her hands may help the pregnant woman avoid infection. Infection could cause permanent damage to the unborn child [CDC, 2008]. 

CMV can also be spread through sexual activity (STD/ STI).

 

[American Social Health Association, http://www.ashastd.org/learn/learn_glossary_A_D.cfm]

 
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