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Did you know
?
Around one in every 1000 babies
born in the UK will have Down's syndrome.
There are 60,000 people in
the UK with the condition.
Although the chance of a baby
having Down's syndrome is higher for older mothers, more
babies with Down's syndrome are born to younger women.
Down's syndrome is caused
by the presence of an extra chromosome in a baby's cells.
It occurs by chance at conception and is irreversible.
Down's syndrome is not a disease.
People with Down's syndrome are not ill and do not "suffer"
from the condition.
People with the syndrome will
have a degree of learning difficulty. However, most people
with Down's syndrome will walk and talk and many will read
and write, go to ordinary schools and lead fulfilling, semi-independent
lives.
Today the average life expectancy
for a person with Down's syndrome is between 50 and 60.
A considerable number of people with Down's syndrome live
into their 60's.
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