From Obstetrics & Gynecology, Volume  110, No. 6, December 2007, page 1459 (ACOG membership or $20 payment required  for articles.) Heralding a change in standard obstetric practice, the American College of  Obstetricians and Gynecologists has recommended that pregnant women of all ages  – not just women aged 35 and over — should be offered invasive prenatal  diagnostic testing such as amniocentesis and chorionic villus sampling to detect  possible genetic abnormalities in their fetuses. The recommendation, published in a practice bulletin in the December issue of  the organization’s journal Obstetrics & Gynecology, dramatically expands  women’s access to prenatal diagnosis, effectively making all prenatal tests and  screens available to all of the 6 million American women who get pregnant each  year. It will establish a new standard of care, and change expectations for  insurance coverage and legal liability involving pregnancy. Until now, obstetricians have usually offered invasive testing just to women  at or above age 35 at delivery. The age threshold was chosen because at that age  the risk of miscarriage as a result of the testing was roughly equal to the risk  of having a child with Down syndrome, the most common genetic abnormality  occurring in live births. In addition, the medical community balanced the cost  of offering the testing against their calculation of the cost savings associated  with preventing the birth of an infant with Down syndrome. This past January, ACOG expanded the scope of prenatal testing by  recommending for the first time that all pregnant women regardless of age be  offered prenatal screening, a process in which a woman’s blood is used to  calculate the risk that her fetus has an abnormality. The December ACOG bulletin will open prenatal testing access wider still. The  current bulletin does not explain why the professional organization has now  dramatically expanded access to prenatal testing twice within a year.  Researchers have maintained that universal access to prenatal testing will allow  women to make their own informed decisions regarding their pregnancies and  minimize disparities in access to health care. The changes come at a time when growing numbers of medical malpractice  lawsuits are pushing insurance costs for obstetricians and gynecologists to  record highs, resulting in a situation that ACOG has called a “medical liability  crisis.” In a statement posted on the group’s website last  year, ACOG executive vice president Ralph W. Hale said the rising tide of  lawsuits was caused not by a high rate of medical wrongdoing but by unreasonable  public expectations. “Ob-gyns are vulnerable because they practice in a  high-risk field, and all too often, doctors are held liable for less than  perfect outcomes,” he said. ACOG’s current recommendation seems to thrust the 49,000-member professional  organization deeper into the cultural debate over public attitudes toward  abortion, particularly about where to draw the line between preventing  disability and accepting human diversity. The National Down Syndrome Congress (NDSC) last  January condemned ACOG’s recommendation for universally offered prenatal  screening, saying it conveyed “tacit approval for terminating pregnancies where  the fetus has Down syndrome.” Studies say that approximately 9 out of 10  pregnancies in the U.S. in which Down syndrome is diagnosed end in abortion. The NDSC also cited research noting that many doctors are not adequately  prepared to deliver a diagnosis of Down syndrome, and often use negative  language and out-of-date information. Down syndrome, which results when a person has three copies of the 21st  chromosome instead of the usual pair, is longest known and most common genetic  birth defect, as well as the most common cause of intellectual disability.  Approximately 250,000-350,000 Americans have Down syndrome, which occurs once in  every 733 to 1,000 births, according to the NDSC and the National Down Syndrome Society. Advocacy groups and parents say gains in health care and education have  brought about markedly improved outcomes for these individuals over the past two  decades, with many people with Down syndrome now completing high school, holding  jobs and living semi-independently. But parents say these gains have not been  adequately documented and are poorly understood within the obstetrics  community. In an apparent nod to the NDSC’s criticism, ACOG included in its December  practice bulletin for the first time the recommendation that prospective parents  who receive a diagnosis of a fetal disorder should be provided with “detailed  information, if known, about the natural history of individuals” with the  disorder. ACOG also noted that “it may be very helpful” to refer prospective parents to  advocacy groups such as the NDSC or the NDSS. The bulletin does not, however, offer any recommendations for collecting or  distributing information to doctors about the lives of people with Down syndrome  or other chromosomal abnormalities, nor for training its 49,000 members in  delivering and interpreting prenatal test information. A study published in  ACOG’s journal last year found that 45 percent of obstetricians rated their  training about prenatal testing as “barely adequate or nonexistent.” As a result of the new ACOG bulletin, each pregnant woman will now need to  decide which is greater: her fear of a chromosomal abnormality, or her fear that  invasive testing could harm her fetus. The ACOG bulletin estimates that the risk  of miscarriage as a result of the invasive tests is “as low as” one in 300-500,  and “may be even lower with experienced individuals or centers.” Other estimates  say that approximately one in every 200 women who undergoes invasive testing  will miscarry her pregnancy. The risk of a fetus with a chromosomal abnormality varies with the mother’s  age. According to ACOG data, the lowest recorded risk goes to 19-year-olds, with  a risk of 1 in 555, and the highest goes to a 49-year-old, with a risk of 1 in  6. The financial impact of the new ACOG bulletin is not known, but could extend  above the billion-dollar mark. Amniocentesis and chorionic villus sampling  (CVS), the invasive tests, are both more expensive and more accurate than the  maternal blood test screens. The consumer cost of each amniocentesis is more  than $1,000. Chorionic villus sampling costs between $600 and $1200. More  invasive tests would also call for an increase in costs for training, facilities  and equipment. Amniocentesis and CVS each involve removing and examining material from  inside the uterus during pregnancy with a long needle or plastic tube to check  for chromosomal differences. The maternal blood-test screens do not deliver definitive results but only  report the odds that a particular fetus may have an abnormality. They also carry  a significant risk of both false positives and false negatives. In a tacit acknowledgment of the ongoing abortion debate, the bulletin notes  that “Prenatal diagnosis is not performed solely for assistance in the decision  of pregnancy termination. It can provide useful information for the physician  and the patient.” The practice bulletin listed the recommendation for offering invasive  diagnostic testing to all pregnant women as a “Level C” recommendation, one that  is “based primarily on consensus and expert opinion.” This is the lowest rank  used in justifying ACOG recommendations. Higher rankings that may be used for ACOG recommendations are “Level A”  (”based on good and consistent scientific evidence”) and “Level B” (”based on  limited or inconsistent scientific evidence.”)
This makes me want to get our book finished all the more and sooner! Doctors and many others need to be educated about Down syndrome.
The ACOG put new guidelines out in January/February of 2006 that recommended all pregnant women be screened for Down syndrome. 90% of babies who are prenatally diagnosed with Down syndrome are aborted. That statistic is disgusting! It seems as if the ACOG is trying to "rid the world" of people with Down syndrome. It's terrible that these babies are aborted because of a chromosomal abnormality, which they had nothing to do with. God is the one who made them with that extra chromosome. Our society has warped views that they have to have "the perfect child." But, what's also terrible is that the amniocentesis and the CVS screenings are not even accurate. They have a lot of false negatives and false positives.New ACOG guidelines: Invasive prenatal testing  should be offered to all pregnant women.
  
 







 





 
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