Johannesburg

Thursday

Showers late. Afternoon clouds. Cool.

8°C
18°C

7 day forecasts

Baby boys more likely to die

2008-03-24 13:44

Chicago - Baby boys are more likely to die than baby girls and medical advances have actually increased the gender gap, a study released on Monday found.

An analysis of infant mortality in 15 developed countries found that baby boys are 24% more likely to die than baby girls.

This is down from a peak of 31% in 1970, but double the rate in the days before the development of vaccines and public health measures like improved sanitation dramatically improved infant mortality rates.

"During the great historical improvements in infant mortality, the rising male disadvantage in infancy revealed a level of unexpected male vulnerability," the study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences concluded.

"As infant mortality falls to very low levels, infant deaths become increasingly concentrated among those who are born with some weakness".

In utero

The male disadvantage begins in utero.

Girls have a stronger immune system while boys are 60% more likely to be born prematurely and to suffer from respiratory problems, among others.

Boys are also more likely to cause risky or difficult labour because of their larger body and head size.

When poor sanitation and nutrition weakened all babies and mothers the male disadvantage was less noticeable: from 1751 until 1870 the gender mortality gap was about 10 to 15%.

But the development of the germ theory dramatically cut infectious disease rates, making complications of childbirth and premature birth more common causes of death.

The gender gap rose steadily as infant mortality rates plummeted and only began to reverse with the increased use caesarean sections and improvements in neonatal care.

C-section

Only about five percent of babies born prior to 1970 were delivered by c-section while more than 20% of births in the 15 developed nations studied are now performed by c-section.

"Changes in obstetrical practice and neonatal medicine that saved all but the weakest babies have benefited boys more than girls because boys were more vulnerable across the entire range of birth weights," the authors concluded.

"In addition to changes in delivery practices, improvements in neonatal intensive care also may have benefited males more than females."

The 15 countries analysed include Sweden, France, Denmark, England/Wales, Norway, The Netherlands, Italy, Switzerland, Finland, the United States, Spain, Australia, Canada, Belgium and Japan.

- AFP

inside news24

Cpt: 8-10°C Sprinkles early. Partly cloudy. Cool. Pta: 10-17°C Tstorms late. Afternoon clouds. Cool.
Jhb: 8-18°C Showers late. Afternoon clouds. Cool. Bloem: 7-17°C Morning clouds. Cool.
Dbn: 13-19°C More sun than clouds. Cool. PE: 10-13°C More clouds than sun. Cool.
7 day forecasts...
Western Cape Eastern Cape Kwazulu Natal Gauteng

Stellenbosch - 18:46:22 PM Accident at the Kayamandi Bridge More traffic reports...

Here are the winning Lotto numbers from the Saturday, November 7 draw.

18, 24, 25, 31, 35, 42 Bonus 38

Lotto plus: 4, 14, 17, 20, 21, 34 Bonus 3

SMS the word Lotto to 31222 to get lotto numbers sent directly to your phone. The service costs just R10 per month. 
More lotto numbers...

Jobs - Find your dream job

Application Programmer

Gauteng - Pretoria
Kanimambo

Senior Transport Engineer

Free State - Bloemfontein
Budget Recruitment Services

Electrical Engineer

Eastern Cape
Budget Recruitment Services

Cars - Search 1000's of new and used cars

AUDI

2008 A4 1.8T Multitronics from R 269 000

OPEL

Corsa Lite 1.4 AC 3-dr MY06
2008
R 76,900.00

VOLKSWAGEN

Citigolf 1.4i GTS 5-dr
2009
R 117,947.00

AUDI

A4 2.0 TFSi Multitronic 7-sp MY05
2005
R 169,899.00

Property - Find a new home

WOODLAND HILLS

Single Residential R3,300,000

LITTLE FALLS

Single Residential R3,300,000

GLENVISTA

Single Residential R4,400,000

Travel - Look, Book, Go!

Free Games - TOO MUCH NEWS? TAKE A BREAK!