15/10/02说明:此前论坛服务器频繁出错,现已更换服务器。今后论坛继续数据库备份,不备份上传附件。

肝胆相照论坛

 

 

肝胆相照论坛 论坛 学术讨论& HBV English 存档 1 洛杉矶时报:中国性别失衡与乙肝病毒有关 ...
查看: 1448|回复: 2

洛杉矶时报:中国性别失衡与乙肝病毒有关 [复制链接]

Rank: 4

现金
1102 元 
精华
帖子
789 
注册时间
2005-11-2 
最后登录
2009-5-14 
1
发表于 2005-11-12 11:56

参考消息上看到的,找到原文了,记得年初的参考上也刊登过的

哈佛大学学者数据发现,感染HBV的母亲生育男孩的几率高出1.5倍。

November 1, 2005 latimes.com :

Viral Theory on China Gender Gap

  • A Harvard economist finds a correlation between hepatitis B and the unusually high rate of male births.

  • By Ching-Ching Ni, Times Staff Writer

    BEIJING — If left entirely to nature, the number of newborn boys and girls in the world should be roughly equal. But in some cultures that balance has been artificially tipped in favor of boys.

    In China, the problem is commonly attributed to gender discrimination, which leads to selective abortions and even female infanticide. But a new study suggests that disease may have as much to do with a baby's gender as does preference.
    In a soon-to-be-published paper in the Journal of Political Economy, Harvard economist Emily Oster contends that the gender disparity in some parts of Asia is linked to the prevalence of the hepatitis B virus.
    Using recent vaccination data, Oster found that mothers infected with hepatitis B were 1.5 times more likely to give birth to a boy. Though that is not the sole explanation for the imbalance, Oster says, the liver disease may account for nearly half of the so-called missing girl population previously attributed primarily to gender discrimination.

    The issue of sex ratio is so complex and intertwined with the social and economic context of a particular region that some experts are skeptical that it can be explained away by a simple virus.

    But Oster's findings, if substantiated, could help explain the growing gender disparity in China, where boys are prized for carrying on the family name and providing for aging parents.

    The country's strict one-child policy has led to the abortion of healthy female fetuses and the killing of baby girls in some areas, despite laws forbidding such practices. The shifting demographics also threaten to turn China into a country of surplus bachelors who desperately outnumber potential brides.

    In 1982, China's sex ratio was about 100 girls to 109 boys. By 2000, it was 100 girls to 117 boys. The current figure is closer to 100 to 119. In some rural areas, the ratio has hit 100 to 133.

    Oster says as much as 75% of the disparity in China could be due to hepatitis B, which infects as much as 15% of the population.

    In India and Pakistan, however, the liver disease accounted for less than 20% of gender imbalance, the study says.

    Oster was inspired to examine the relationship between hepatitis and gender after reading a book by Baruch Blumberg, who discovered the hepatitis B virus. The book explored the link in Greece and Greenland. Oster then looked at vaccination records in Alaska and found that the ratio of boys to girls was higher before the availability of hepatitis vaccine and near normal after the shots were introduced.

    Oster studied vaccination records in other countries, primarily in Asia, where the birthrate of boys is unusually high. Her research suggests that the virus is linked to the poor survival rate of female embryos.

    Siri Tellier, a United Nations Population Fund representative in China, pointed to two factors that undercut the findings: In Tibet, where hepatitis B is widespread, the birthrate of males is relatively low. And in China, the gender ratio among firstborns is close to normal, but the gap widens for subsequent children. Tellier says the girl-boy ratio for second births is 100 to 152.

    "This makes it very unlikely that the sex ratio is caused by hepatitis B — otherwise why would it go up by birth order?" Tellier said. "I'm not saying it's impossible, but you definitely need further discussion on this before you decide that's the final causal mechanism."

    Observers say that even if hepatitis is proved to be a key culprit in the imbalance, it does not change the fact that gender bias exists and will continue to influence reproductive choices.

    "The only way to solve the problem of sex ratio differences is to get rid of gender discrimination in the system and guarantee gender equality," said Lu Jiehua, a population studies expert at Peking University. "That's the only way to reduce the pressure on farmers and low-income people to pick boys over girls."
    初从文,三年不中;后习武,校场发一矢,中考官,乱棒殴之出;遂学医,有所成。自撰一良方,服之,卒。拒绝HBV的企业:飞利浦、中兴,西门子医疗,更新中

    Rank: 9Rank: 9Rank: 9

    现金
    8479 元 
    精华
    帖子
    2890 
    注册时间
    2002-8-18 
    最后登录
    2007-6-27 

    荣誉之星

    2
    发表于 2005-11-17 13:05
    80年代我就看到国内的一篇报道,说HBV携带者容易生男孩,对比单位里面小范围的样本,似乎能证明这个论点。文章说出道理,是乙肝表面抗原类似染色体一种什么物质的,不记得了。
    世界卫生组织把“健康”定义为“躯体的、心理的以及社会适应的良好状态”。 推崇科学,破除迷信!允许宗教信仰自由,反对荒谬迷信观点,支持探索气功强身健体,反对伪科学误导战友。 丰富的营养、充足的休息、适度的运动。

    Rank: 7Rank: 7Rank: 7

    现金
    7131 元 
    精华
    帖子
    1690 
    注册时间
    2005-5-9 
    最后登录
    2012-1-31 
    3
    发表于 2005-11-18 10:14
    可信吗?![em04]
    春花秋月梦中身,翻江倒海身外事!
    ‹ 上一主题|下一主题

    肝胆相照论坛

    GMT+8, 2024-10-7 09:23 , Processed in 0.013425 second(s), 11 queries , Gzip On.

    Powered by Discuz! X1.5

    © 2001-2010 Comsenz Inc.