The Jewish Week reports:
The          Vanquishing Of Tay-Sachs
        The fatal genetic disease has almost disappeared among Jews thanks to          aggressive screening — and the efforts of two parents.
       
        By then, the Tay-Sachs screening procedure ... had become commonplace          among potential mates and parents-to-be. The screening, discovered in          1969, meant that “Tay-Sachs was 95 percent eliminated” in American          Jewry, a speaker at the dinner announced. Prominent Jewish organizations          quickly advocated Tay-Sachs screening, and the disease’s incidence          plummeted by the mid 1970s, remaining low since then.
       
        Today, according to recent figures, of the 20 or so children diagnosed          with Tay-Sachs in the U.S. each year, only a handful are Ashkenazi Jews,          like the Dunkells. The rest are members of the Cajun community of          Louisiana or are French-Canadians living near the St. Lawrence River,          who have not undergone screening as frequently as American Jews...
       
        Today, most Jewish couples undergo the screening, either before marriage          (Orthodox couples do not generally approve of abortions, so Orthodox          carriers either choose to marry other mates or adopt) or after          conception (for people for whom abortion is an alternative when the          fetus is found to have the disease.)
       
        Some couples who are unwilling to consider terminating a pregnancy can          also do an in-vitro fertilization that involves an analysis of the          embryo’s DNA.
       
        Despite reports in the media about the decline in Tay-Sachs, because of          the Jewish community’s openness to Tay-Sachs screening the achievement          of nearly wiping it out is not widely known.
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