Health
Selective abortions killed 22.5 million female foetuses in China, India
Abortions lead to gender ratio distortions in 12 Asian and European countries
By Kiran Pandey
Published: Wednesday 17 April 2019
Abortions based on sex selection have led to larger-than-thought variation in sex ratios, reveals a global study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The natural gender ratio for humans is 100 female babies to 105 male babies. But this ratio has been distorted due to abortions, finds the study conducted across 202 countries. While specifically focusing on how selective abortions by women impact the sex ratio, it focuses on 12 Asian and European countries which favour male babies.
22.5 million females missing in China and India
Nearly 23.1 million females are missing due to sex-selective abortions in 12 Asian and European countries finds the five-year study. The study has revealed the largest differences in gender ratios from China and India. China currently has approximately 11.9 million missing females and India has approximately 10.6 million missing females
China had the worst sex ratio in 2005; less women to produce babies
The sex ratio in China was worst in 2005 where approximately 100 female bables were born in comparison to 118 male births. Even though China lifted a law prohibiting more than one child per couple, population growth has continued to stagnate due to the lack of women to produce babies.
Overall, sex ratio in India has declined from 903 in 2007 to 898 in 2018, as per Niti Aayog.
10 other countries with skewed sex-ratio
The other countries identified with sex ratio imbalance (SRB) were Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Hong Kong, Republic of Korea, Montenegro, Taiwan, Tunisia and Vietnam.
What led to sex-selective abortion
Preference for sons and improved technology for prenatal sex diagnosis, along with declining fertility level are the three main factors that led to sex-selective abortion said the study citing a United Nations study. Legal medical abortion for several weeks after onset of pregnancy has also been misused.
Fertility fell to low levels around the world that resulted in a “squeezing effect”. Sex-selective abortion is a way to avoid large families while still having a male child. Necessary conditions for the occurrence of sex-selective abortions include a large tolerance for induced abortion from both the population and the medical establishment, available techniques for early sex detection, and legal medical abortion for several weeks after onset of pregnancy.
An up-to-date systematic analysis for the SRB — one of the most fundamental demographic indicators — for all countries over time using all available data with reproducible estimation method is urgently needed. So, this global assessment of natural variations in the sex ratio at birth done using a new estimation method must be considered while estimating population in the future for effective policy and programmes said University of Massachusetts Amherst biostatistician Leontine Alkema , associate professor in the School of Public Health and Health Sciences, who led the study.
Related Stories
- Sex-ratio gap on a constant high
- India’s child sex ratio has reached ‘emergency proportions’: UN study
India Environment Portal Resources :
- Systematic assessment of the sex ratio at birth for all countries and estimation of national imbalances and regional reference levels
- The global gender gap report 2018
- Judgement of the Supreme Court of India regarding increase of female foeticide in India, 08/11/2016
- Order of the Supreme Court of India regarding sex ratio of India especially Delhi, 15/04/2015
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