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  Vol. 280 No. 13, October 7, 1998 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Declines in Population Sex Ratios at Birth

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text and any section headings.

To the Editor: Dr Davis and colleagues1 cite evidence that the sex ratio (proportion of males at birth) has been diminishing during the last few decades in the United States, Canada, Sweden, Germany, Norway, Finland, Denmark, the Netherlands, and some countries in South America. The authors also cite evidence that declines in sex ratio (mainly male) are associated with exposure to a number of deleterious chemicals, including dioxin, the nematocide dibromochloropropane and other pesticides, borates, alcohol, lead, solvents, and waste anesthetic gases. They raise the question of whether the decline was attributable to exposure to these chemicals. To answer that question, we need to know what the population sex ratios would have been in the absence of those chemical agents.

Gini2 showed that population sex ratios typically varied up and down slowly across time well before the introduction of those agents. These variations were statistically significant but remain unexplained. During . . . [Full Text of this Article]



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Reduced Ratio of Male to Female Births in Several Industrial Countries: A Sentinel Health Indicator?
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