The figure has jumped significantly from 64.7 percent in 2005.
From 1995 through 1997, that figure jumped above 4 percent.
But this year the figure will jump to $10 million in 40 publications.
And when costs of development are included the figure jumps to $1.7 billion.
The figure jumped to more than 20 percent for women who did not have the condition.
Not a second later, a figure jumped out of nowhere.
By the year 2010, that figure will jump to 26,000, he said.
By 1985 this figure had jumped to 23.3 percent, nearly one child in five.
By 1989, that figure had jumped to about 40 percent.
Ten years later, the figure jumped to one in three.