The "baby hatch" in Guangzhou, in the southern province of Guangdong, was suspended yesterday after the city's welfare home exceeded its capacity to handle new arrivals.
All of those abandoned suffered from illnesses including cerebral palsy, Down's syndrome and congenital heart disease, and 67 per cent of them were less than a year old, the Bureau of Civil Affairs of Guangzhou Municipality said.
The 1,000-bed welfare home was housing 1,121 residents, with another 1,274 being cared for by foster families, the statement issued yesterday said.
Its quarantine facilities were "not enough to meet the demand" and wards that had previously held 50 children were now caring for 80 to 100, it added.
China has set up 25 baby safe havens in 10 provinces and major cities since June 2011 and plans to roll out the facilities to most of the country, the official Xinhua news agency reported in February.
Welfare staff retrieve a baby five to 10 minutes after a person leaves the child and presses the alarm button, allowing families to give up the infant safely and anonymously.
Many babies are given up because parents cannot afford expensive medical bills and fees for special education, it said.
A disabled child can be a huge drain on a family's resources, and although the country's one-child policy normally allows parents to have another baby if their first is disabled, the restrictions can be a factor in other abandonments.
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