U.S. test-tube births underreported by
states, study finds
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[December 10, 2014]
By David Beasley
ATLANTA (Reuters) - The number of test-tube
babies born each year in the United States is underreported by states, a
new federal study found on Wednesday, complicating efforts by
researchers to understand the risks associated with pregnancies
resulting from in vitro fertilizations.
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The research by the National Center for Health Statistics compared
birth certificate data in 27 states and Washington, D.C., with the
numbers from a federal survey of the medical clinics that use
assisted reproductive technology to join eggs and sperm in a
laboratory dish.
There were 38,496 test-tube babies born in 2011, the federal survey
found, which was more than twice as many as were reported on the
states' birth certificates. The largest disparity between the
numbers was in Florida and the lowest was in Utah, the study found.
Researchers do not know the reasons for the differences, said Marie
Thoma, one of the study's authors. But improving the accuracy of the
state data is key to better understanding the outcomes of these
pregnancies, she said.
The number of children conceived using in vitro fertilization,
sometimes called test-tube babies, has risen steadily in the United
States since the early 1980s, the study said.
Due to the expense and complications associated with the procedure,
multiple embryos are often implanted, leading to more births of
twins and triplets, Thoma said. Such multiple births also carry
higher risks.
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A report issued earlier this year by the Society for Assisted
Reproductive Technology found a record number of test-tube babies
were born in 2012 in the United States.
The group, which represents more than 90 percent of the infertility
clinics in the country, reported that in 2012 they performed 165,172
in vitro fertilization procedures, resulting in the birth of 61,740
babies.
In vitro technology accounted for just over 1.5 percent of the total
U.S. births that year, more than ever before.
(Editing by Letitia Stein and Lisa Shumaker)
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