­¦ý°±·;œ œ›œ œœ œR ¿FôÂ#íþºÄ CompObj\WordDocument ObjectPoolÄM#íþºÄM#íþºœ'()*+,-œœ ¿FMicrosoft Word 6.0 DocumentœNB6WWord.Document.6;œ œfrq qj1cd(389r-XVL83%H$`FX%KG&8lF1H3!kRVKh"rM+9LlC@F(EYA@r#F1QiGA-BS pXjEaVe2kPX5N&TY25#'P&Slpc$H)qFfjFc%c0)qMadYF!F`jl`!0DGGA Down's Syndrome Case Study Maggie was 43 years old. She and her husband, Jim, had been married for 12 years and had a wonderful and intelligent 10 year old daughter. Maggie and her husband had worked hard and had been able to buy their dream house in the country. Maggie had looked forward to this moment for so many years. Now she had to face the truth--she was pregnant. Since Maggie had a college degree in Biology, she knew that because she was over 40 years old she had a greater chance of having a child with Down's Syndrome - a disorder in which the child has too many of chromosome 21. The result is that the child is retarded and frequently has heart disorders and may die young. Maggie's older sister had a Down's Syndrome son who had died at age 5 after an extended hospital stay and slow degeneration of the heart. Maggie had watched her sister's family fall apart. She knew that she could not handle such a situation although Maggie felt that her family was strong. Maggie knew that there was a test that could be done to see if the baby had Down's Syndrome. This test is called amniocentesis. It is where a sample of amniotic fluid is taken from the mother and the baby's chromosomes are analyzed. Maggie's doctor had already discussed this test with her. QUESTIONS TO THINK ABOUT: 1. Should Maggie have amniocentesis? 2. If the test shows that Maggie's baby has Down's Syndrome, what should she do? (List her options and select the one that you like best.) °­¦ý°±·;œ ÚüÖýO˜h´ë+'„0‡òý#@ F R ^jSummaryInformation(&Ìr zÜ£ ´µ6FHVT#5(3'iLjURqHINk0`-$@Dawg Daze:Applications:Microsoft Office:Microsoft Word 6:Normal Down's Syndrome Case StudyPower Computing UserPower Computing User'@ËÐ íþº@Äv²ÚÃÁ@ËÐ íþº@Microsoft Word 6.0.12œ ЀhS¿ eþþlllllllññññññ Ý ñ'D&kXˆY'l'llllÄàllllU Down's Syndrome Case Study Maggie was 43 years old. She and her husband, Jim, had been married for 12 years and had a wonderful and intelligent 10 year old daughter. Maggie and her husband had worked hard and had been able to buy their dream house in the country. Maggie had looked forward to this moment for so many years. Now she had to face the truth--she was pregnant. Since Maggie had a college degree in Biology, she knew that because she was over 40 years old she had a greater chance of having a child with Down's Syndrome - a disorder in which the child has too many of chromosome 21. The result is that the child is retarded and frequently has heart disorders and may die young. Maggie's older sister had a Down's Syndrome son who had died at age 5 after an extended hospital stay and slow degeneration of the heart. Maggie had watched her sister's family fall apart. She knew that she could not handle such a situation although Maggie felt that her family was strong. Maggie knew that there was a test that could be done to see if the baby had Down's Syndrome. This test is called amniocentesis. It is where a sample of amniotic fluid is taken from the mother and the baby's chromosomes are analyzed. Maggie's doctor had already discussed this test with her. QUESTIONS TO THINK ABOUT: 1. Should Maggie have amniocentesis? 2. If the test shows that Maggie's baby has Down's Syndrome, what should she do? (List her options and select the one that you like best.) °( [l-46%4PAa,iMJZ`BT,+Gah6`1A@K1(938DN6FK#[2f4QDf&6)ZTQ)+KefaV6S`e G9-F*B#BVTd!Zb,aj,a[Z&2qc[Dh',(i(DiJ84@ca-%NPUPH*U(RT$cXMRZL[U1+ aS*2KPpY`6%4MXF%&[IKJ80!,6!4h@3N3)&SfX!!H2HUh,(p!%UK)"rJ6)G0`6Er Ef3j5f[b@GpDAljGl0RTXG()I9*N#pSP13e5"4bhT5*%"'iUM)f@cR3EZm+LX2ci &k!"AlP98G@5`)P3A#Þþ”›˜›—u]c$] !"ø”  &'NÞþœ¿!,œ¿!,š¿!§œ¿!§œ¿!§œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!•K@ÒNormala c"A@Ú°"Default Paragraph Fontþþ þ”þUPower Computing User=Dawg Daze:Under Construction:BEP:New BEP:socsci:10:sCase1.wrd@Ä5üDêMTimes New RomanTimes Symbol MArial êMTimes"à­h@†Ü@†ÜÉ!Y Down's Syndrome Case StudyPower Computing UserPower Computing User­¦ý°±·;œ œR ¿FÄt*íþºÄCompObj\WordDocument=ObjectPoolÄM#íþºÄM#íþºœ›œœ !œSummaryInformation(Ìœ œº@Äv²ÚÃÁ@ËÐ íþº@Microsoft Word 6.0.13­¦ý°±· Down's Syndrome Case Study Maggie was 43 years old. She and her husband, Jim, had been married for 12 years and had a wœ ¿FMicrosoft Word 6.0 DocumentœNB6WWord.Document.6;œ œ ÚüÖýO˜h´ë+'„0‡òý#@ F R ^jr zÜ£ ´µqdT90ekqND[UkCA0RYNRK!Ai@Dawg Daze:Applications:Microsoft Office:Microsoft Word 6:Normal Down's Syndrome Case StudyPower Computing UserPower Computing User'@ËÐ íþЀhS¿ eþ=þlllllllññññññ Ý ñHD&åX”Y'!l'llllÄàllllU Down's Syndrome Case Study Maggie was 43 years old. She and her husband, Jim, had been married for 12 years and had a wonderful and intelligent 10 year old daughter. Maggie and her husband had worked hard and had been able to buy their dream house in the country. Maggie had looked forward to this moment for so many years. Now she had to face the truth--she was pregnant. Since Maggie had a college degree in Biology, she knew that because she was over 40 years old she had a greater chance of having a child with Down's Syndrome - a disorder in which the child has too many of chromosome 21. The result is that the child is retarded and frequently has heart disorders and may die young. Maggie's older sister had a Down's Syndrome son who had died at age 5 after an extended hospital stay and slow degeneration of the heart. Maggie had watched her sister's family fall apart. She knew that she could not handle such a situation although Maggie felt that her family was strong. Maggie knew that there was a test that could be done to see if the baby had Down's Syndrome. This test is called amniocentesis. It is where a sample of amniotic fluid is taken from the mother and the baby's chromosomes are analyzed. Maggie's doctor had already discussed this test with her. QUESTIONS TO THINK ABOUT: 1. Should Maggie have amniocentesis? 2. If the test shows that Maggie's baby has Down's Syndrome, what should she do? (List her options and select the one that you like best.) °( [l-46%4PAa,iMJZ`BT,+Gah6`1A@K1(938DN6FK#[2f4QDf&6)ZTQ)+KefaV6S`e G9-F*B#BVTd!Zb,aj,a[Z&2qc[Dh',(i(DiJ84@ca-%NPUPH*U(RT$cXMRZL[U1+ aS*2KPpY`6%4MXF%&[IKJ80!,6!4h@3N3)&SfX!!H2HUh,(p!%UK)"rJ6)G0`6Er Ef3j5f[b@GpDAljGl0RTXG()I9*N#pSP13e5"4bhT5*%"'iUM)f@cR3EZm+LX2ci &k!"AlP98G@5`)P3A#Þþ”›˜›—u]c$] !"ø”  &'NÞþœ¿!,œ¿!,š¿!§œ¿!§œ¿!§œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!,œ¿!•K@ÒNormala c"A@Ú°"Default Paragraph Fontþþ þ”þUPower Computing User=Dawg Daze:Under Construction:BEP:New BEP:socsci:10:sCase1.wrd@Ä5üÞþÞDêMTimes New RomanTimes Symbol MArial êMTimes"à­h@†Ü@†ÜÉ!Y Down's Syndrome Case StudyPower Computing UserPower Computing User.htm8·! !tFinger.htm8’! !tMicro.htmF8“!!tPh.htmhtmF9 AACKit.wrdhtm9TTrashy2.wrdd9llabels14wrdd9!llabels14cdmF91OOutrdy.docdd9^IIntrdy.docdd9_s sCase1.docdd9}s sCase1.wrddd9OOutshy2.wrdd9OOutshy2.wrddid.doc­¾îvX:œý¬§ÜhJ,