MOSES LAKE The annual Columbia Basin Buddy Walk drew a bigger crowd than expected Saturday.
“We don’t have a number yet, but more than last year,” said Denise Ketola, one of the event’s organizers. One estimate had between 350 and 400 people, she added.
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BOSTON The growth of prenatal screening in Europe has reduced the number of babies being born per year with Down syndrome (DS) by an average of 54%, according to a new study published in the
European Journal of Human Genetics by researchers from Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and international Down syndrome organizations. In research published in 2016, the same team found that 33% fewer babies with DS per year were born in the United States as a result of pregnancy terminations.
The researchers spent three years collecting data from multiple registries and databases in every country in Europe to estimate the number of babies being born with DS and the overall number of people with DS in the population. People with DS were being counted sporadically, inconsistently, or not at all, depending on the country, says Brian G. Skotko, MD, MPP, a medical geneticist at MGH and senior author. But without an accurate estimate, it s impossible for policymakers and advoca