not sure
I can't speak for the U.S. specifically but according to the National Institutes of Health, Turner Syndrome effects 1 out of every 2,500 female live births worldwide. For more information about it, you can peruse NIH's site at:http://turners.nichd.nih.gov The site has a wide variety of publications you can access, information about current studies, and even the contact information for a NIH doctor if you have questions about the syndrome.
Birth by itself would not be a ratio scale measurement. It would merely be a count. To have a ratio, an item must be in relation to another item. Here are some examples as statements:(General count statistic: A hospital oversaw 300 births in a 1-year period.)(Ratio: Of 15,000 women in a community, 300 babies were born during a 1-year period.)(Ratio: From 2,079 patients admitted to the hospital in that year, 300 were women in labor.)Of the 300 births, half were born to Caucasian women, and half to Black women of Jamaican descent.Of the 300 births, 245 babies and mothers had no birth problems.Of the 300 births, 10 babies were born breech.Of the 300 births, 45 were delivered by C-section.Of the 300 births, 102 showed signs of maternal drug use.Of the 300 births, 12 babies had an Apgar of 3 at 1 minute which improved to 5 at 2 minutes.Of the 300 births, 112 babies experienced very mild jaundice within 12 hours.Of the 300 births, 2 babies developed serious jaundice within 12 hours.Each of these could be written as (x number): 300, example 102:300. The colon would mean out of or from this number.If you only present the "counts" without the total stated, that's just counting, not a ratio. For example:300 babies were born. That gives no ratio information. It's just a count.
Turner Syndrome occurs when a female has only one X chromosome. One of the first signs of Turner is short stature which becomes apparent at about age 5. Most Turner Syndrome women do not go through puberty unless given hormone therapy. They can have obvious skeletal deformities, a lower than normal hairline on the back of their necks, swelling of the hands and feet and additional folds on their necks.
That depends. Men with Down syndrome have been shown to be sterile, while women with Down syndrome are capable of carrying a child, with 50% likelihood that the child will be born with Down syndrome.
It is believed that 1/6 of 1% total of women go through with unassisted births in the Nation, It is not known how many of these unassisted births are by choice.
two chromosomall diseases that aren't inherited are Downs Syndrome, which is an extra chromosome on the number 21, it occurs in 1 in 650 births, often in women over 35, and Klinefelter's Syndrome, which is the presence of an extra x cromosome, ie XXY, it is a result of nondisjunction during gamete formation.
what is the ratio of women to men in California?
Turner Syndrome is a genetic disorder that affects females only. It is caused by the absence of all or part of one of the X chromosomes. This condition is not passed down through family genetics, but occurs randomly.
No
It is not, the women affected by it cannot have their own children, so the syndrome is not inherited.
Yes, many women suffer from PMS (pre menstrul syndrome) Can cause - irritability - mood swings (feeling good, feeling down or angry) - Bloating - Cramps Completly normal.....some birth control can sometimes help the symptoms of pms for some women.
No. Minorities have more , percentage wise.