Swedish researchers recently published the results of a study showing that IVF babies created through artificial insemination are three times more likely to be born with cerebral palsy than babies born from natural insemination. Medical staff from a university children’s hospital in Uppsala, Sweden, Bo. Stromberg and his colleagues looked closely at 5,680 babies bred by artificial insemination and compared them with 11,360 babies of similar age and family background generated by natural insemination, and found that the former were three times more likely to be born with cerebral palsy than the latter; in addition, the former were four times more likely to have developmental delays than the latter. Cerebral palsy, also known as cerebral palsy, is a condition in which a person suffers from loss of motor function, language and memory due to brain damage. Researchers from the Stromberg Research Group believe that IVF babies are prone to cerebral palsy because of side effects caused by artificial insemination, such as multiple pregnancies, premature births and low birth weight. Therefore, the researchers suggest that in the future, it is best to inject only one fertilized embryo at a time into the mother during the artificial insemination process, which will not only reduce the chance of twins and multiple pregnancies, but also reduce the resulting premature birth and low birth weight, thus reducing the incidence of neonatal cerebral palsy.