ok, I found the methodology. In reality they are the following populations: http://www.has-sante.fr/portail/jcms/c_1728538/fr/depistage-neonatal-de-la-drepanocytose-en-france …
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so the Greeks and South-Italians are the only Europeans who are tested. All the other groups are non-Whites.
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it means that the percentages comprises all the babies born from these populations:pic.twitter.com/XT6aCCuAIP
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another interesting point: they test children whom BOTH parents come from risky populations. It means that babies with one
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White (non-Italian/Greek) parent and one Black/Arab/Indian parent are NOT tested.
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Are we sure if such parents are genuine, historically African? Would Camus be an Algerian to boost diversity stats?
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There are almost no diversity stats in France. Camus and other pieds noirs were French, not Algerian.
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The frogs are pretty well boiled at this point
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To be clear, these numbers are only for France métropolitaine (Euro France) and not France d'outre-mer (non-Euro territories)
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IIRC, you can be a carrier if one parent is a carrier, but can only suffer from the condition if both parents are.
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