CDC: More babies are being born with intestines outside their bodies
Last week, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) noted an uptick in the number of babies born with gastroschisis, a serious birth defect in the infant’s abdominal wall. The result, as the CDC explains, is that “the baby’s intestines stick outside of the baby’s body, through a hole beside the belly button.”
Increases in reported cases of gastroschisis, it should be noted, is unrelated to the Zika virus, which causes babies to be born with underdeveloped brains.
In their Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, the CDC reported that an 18-year-long survey that spanned 14 states showed that rates of gastroschisis have gone up among all mothers. From the report:
The pooled data included approximately 29% of U.S. births for the period 1995–2012. During 1995–2012, gastroschisis prevalence increased in every category of maternal age and race/ethnicity, and the [average annual percent change (AAPC)] ranged from 3.1% in non-Hispanic white (white) mothers aged <20 years to 7.9% in non-Hispanic black (black) mothers aged <20 years. These corresponded to overall percentage increases during 1995–2012 that ranged from 68% in white mothers aged <20 years to 263% in black mothers aged <20 years. Gastroschisis prevalence increased 30% between the two periods, from 3.6 per 10,000 births during 1995–2005 to 4.9 per 10,000 births during 2006–2012.
Though cases of gastroschisis have gone up most dramatically among black teen mothers, young white and Hispanic mothers are overall more likely to give birth to babies with gastroschisis.