综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

  Home>News Center>Life
         
 

China: Drug bid to skirt family planning
(AP)
Updated: 2006-02-14 10:01

More Chinese women are exploiting easy access to fertility treatments to skirt China's one-child limit, leading to a boom in numbers of multiple births, an official newspaper reported Monday.


The number of multiple births in China annually may have doubled due to easy access to fertility drugs. [AP]
The main pediatric hospital in the eastern city of Nanjing recorded 90 births of twins or triplets last year, up from an average of 20 in past years, the China Daily said.

While many women underwent fertility treatment because they could not conceive, others -- especially among the urban upper class and in conservative rural areas -- did so specifically to get more babies per birth, the report said.

In the late 1970s China began limiting most couples to one child, harshly punishing violators in the hope of limiting its ballooning population, which now stands at 1.3 billion.

Although the number of exceptions has broadened in recent years, the limits remain, despite fears that the working age population is shrinking.

While no exact figures were available, previous media reports said the number of twins born annually has doubled nationwide. There are no penalties for multiple births.

Fueling the trend is the accessibility of imported fertility drugs in clinics and pharmacies.

Although the Health Ministry banned their use by healthy women in 2005, enforcement was virtually nonexistent, China Daily said.

The only way to control the sale was by forcing chemists to ask for prescriptions before selling the drugs, an unnamed Nanjing municipal Health Department official told the newspaper.

The phenomenon of taking fertility drugs specifically to produce twins is not limited to China alone.

British doctors say around 10 percent of women seeking fertility treatment specifically ask for twins.



Free Tangyuan feast for migrant workers
Jet Li's emotion in motion
Jay Chou says he's still a mommy's boy
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

Top planner: Oil refinery capacity 'must rise'

 

   
 

CPC punished 115,143 members last year

 

   
 

Chemical spills into river in Shaanxi

 

   
 

Saddam lashes out at Bush, judge in court

 

   
 

HK officials enforce poultry ban

 

   
 

On a day for love, it is a matter of dates

 

   
  China: Drug bid to skirt family planning
   
  American singles cold shoulder romance: survey
   
  Guang dropped as surname for Guangzhou orphans
   
  Heart-racing letters of US presidents to valentines
   
  AIDS now third most deadly disease in China
   
  Valentine's Day marked with matching nose, eye jobs
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Family planning policy becomes controversial topic
   
Nouveaux riches challenge one-child policy
   
New family planning reward policy slated
   
One-child policy grows bigger children
   
China to cap population at 1.37 bln by 2010
   
State councilor: China should stick to family planning policy
   
Mainland population below 1.37 billion by 2010
  Feature  
  Could China's richest be the tax cheaters?  
Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
Advertisement
         
荔波县| 高青县| 买车| 平顶山市| 略阳县| 小金县| 南昌市| 盐池县| 湛江市| 关岭| 高要市| 玛多县| 延寿县| 长沙县| 天全县| 安康市| 策勒县| 凤城市| 蒙阴县| 确山县| 南康市| 罗田县| 宿松县| 五大连池市| 突泉县| 丰台区| 政和县| 肥西县| 石楼县| 彩票| 雷州市| 南陵县| 天水市| 三亚市| 桐庐县| 侯马市| 瓮安县| 白水县| 浮山县| 星座| 新闻|