Texas Department of State Health Services. Texas Birth Defect Epidemiology and Surveillance Branch.
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Texas Department of State Health Services. Texas Birth Defect Epidemiology and Surveillance Branch.
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Texas Department of State Health Services. Texas Birth Defect Epidemiology and Surveillance Branch.
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Biographical History
In April 1991, three babies with anencephaly were born in a Brownsville, Texas, hospital within 36 hours. The babies died soon after birth. When these cases occurred in Cameron County, little was known about what causes NTDs like anencephaly. It was known that, in the United States, NTDs are most common among Hispanics and least common in African Americans. The birth defects are also more common in families with low incomes. Community members thought the birth defect problems could be related to pollution from pesticide use and assembly plant industries along the Mexico/U.S. border. Doctors in the Texas Department of Health (today’s Texas Department of State Health Services [DSHS]) asked epidemiologists from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia, to help them look into the problem.
In response to this cluster and the need for better data, and in recognition of the enormous resources routinely put forth by DSHS in the investigation of birth defect clusters, the Texas State Legislature passed the Texas Birth Defects Act in 1993. Out of this statute, the Texas Birth Defects Registry was created to actively identify children born with birth defects. At about the same time, the Texas Neural Tube Defects Project (TNTDP) was initiated by TDH and collaborators. This seven-year study, funded in large part by the CDC, focused on surveillance, research and recurrence prevention in Texas counties along the border with Mexico. Although the TNTDP wrapped up data collection in 2000, scientific research into the possible causes of NTDs continues to be published by the Texas Department of State Health Services.
The Texas Neural Tube Defects Archives chronicle this effort from the 1980s to 2003, and has now been donated to the Briscoe Library at the UT Health Science Center San Antonio. It is hoped that this will allow and encourage researchers to contribute to better understanding this unique public health event and the efforts that it stimulated.
Sources:
Texas Birth Defects Monitor , Vol. 16, Issue 1, June 2000.)
Texas Department of State Health Services website, Neural Tube Defects and the Texas-Mexico Border
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Subjects
Anencephaly
Brownsville (Tex.)
Cameron County (Tex.)
Folic Acid
Laredo (Tex.)
Neural Tube Defects - etiology
Neural Tube Defects
Pesticides
Public health
Spinal Dysraphism