Drinking alcohol during pregnancy amounts to sharing
your cocktail with your tiny, developing baby. The same level of
alcohol you ingest is also ingested by your baby, says the American
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).
Why is alcohol consumption during pregnancy so bad
for your baby? Mainly because alcohol consumption during pregnancy
affects your baby's cognitive and physical development. The highest
risk from alcohol to your developing baby is during the earliest stages
of pregnancy, when baby's critical organs are forming and cells are
dividing very rapidly. The more you drink during pregnancy, the greater
health risks you and your baby are facing. Since there is no known safe
level of alcohol consumption during pregnancy, the ACOG recommends
eliminating all alcohol consumption during pregnancy to optimize your
chances for a healthy baby.
According to ACOG, if you are a heavy drinker before,
during, or after pregnancy, you face a slew of serious health problems
such as:
- Vitamin and mineral deficiency
- Damage to your internal organs, including your brain, liver, and digestive system
- Depression
- Increased risk of certain types of cancer
For baby, the effects of alcohol abuse include:
- Miscarriage
- Fetal alcohol syndrome, the most common cause of mental retardation in babies
- Physical defects
- Low birth weight
- Hyperactivity
- Decreased attention span
And the evidence against drinking during pregnancy
only continues to mount. It used to be believed that drinking moderate
amounts (a drink a day) was relatively safe. But it's only recently
been discovered that children of women who drank during pregnancy —
even those who had as little as one drink a day — were experiencing
developmental problems throughout their childhood and even into
adolescence. A 2002 study by the University of Pittsburgh found that
children of mothers who drank at least one drink a day during their
first trimester weighed, on average, 16 pounds less at the age of 14
than those with no exposure to alcohol in the womb.
The message is clear: Pregnant women should not be
drinking at all. If you're pregnant and find yourself unable to stop
drinking, don't be ashamed to talk with your obstetrician. She can
recommend ways for you to find the help and support you need to stop
drinking for your sake, and for your precious baby's sake.
Source: American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
| Women can have special
risk factors for drug abuse. Women can become addicted quickly to
certain drugs, such as crack cocaine. Therefore, by the time they seek
help, their addiction may be difficult to treat. Women who use drugs
often suffer from other serious health problems, sexually transmitted
diseases, and mental health problems, such as depression.
Many women who use drugs have had troubled lives.
Studies have found that at least 70 percent of women drug users have
been sexually abused by the age of sixteen. Most of these women had at
least one parent who abused alcohol or drugs. |
Facts About Women and Drug Abuse
- 9 million women have used illegal drugs in the past year.
- 3.7 million women have taken prescription drugs nonmedically during the past year.
- More than 28,000 (70%) of the AIDS cases among women are drug-related.
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Women who use drugs tend to have low self-esteem,
little self-confidence, and feel powerless. They often feel lonely and
are isolated from support networks. Women from certain cultural
backgrounds or who have difficulty with the English language may not
know how to find help for their addiction.
Drug use is a serious health problem for many
reasons. Women who use drugs risk becoming infected with HIV, the virus
that causes AIDS. The virus can be spread through needles used to
inject drugs. Therefore, women who inject drugs and share needles are
especially at risk.
The AIDS virus is also spread through sexual contact;
women who have sex with men who inject drugs are at great risk. Today,
almost 70 percent of AIDS cases in women are related to either
injecting drugs or having sex with a man who injects drugs. AIDS is now
the fourth leading cause of death among women.
A mother who uses drugs risks her life and her
baby's. When a pregnant woman uses drugs, she and her unborn child face
serious health problems. During pregnancy, the drugs used by the mother
can enter the baby's bloodstream. The most serious effects on the baby
can be HIV infection, AIDS, prematurity, low birth weight, Sudden
Infant Death Syndrome, small head size, stunted growth, poor motor
skills, and behavior problems. A mother's continuing drug use puts her
children at risk for neglect, physical abuse, and malnutrition.
However, National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
research shows that care and treatment for the pregnant drug abuser can
reduce many of the negative effects on the baby.
Mother
- Poor Nutrition
- High Blood Pressure
- Rapid Heart Beat
- Low Weight Gain
- Low Self Esteem
- Preterm Labor
- Sexually Transmitted Disease
- Early Delivery
- HIV/AIDS
- Depression
- Physical Abuse
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Baby
- Prematurity
- Low Birth Weight
- Infections
- Small Head Size
- Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
- Birth Defects
- Stunted Growth
- Poor Motor Skills
- HIV/AIDS
- Learning Disabilities
- Neurological Problems
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Many women with drug problems are afraid to seek
treatment. Studies have found that more than 4 million women need
treatment for drug abuse. Unfortunately, there are many important
reasons why women do not seek help. Some women may not be able to find
child care. Or they fear that the authorities may take away their
children. Some women fear they will be punished if they admit their
drug addiction. Many women fear violence from their husbands,
boyfriends, or partners.
Friends and family can help relieve these fears for
the woman who uses drugs. They can support her by helping her find good
drug abuse treatment and by providing child care and transportation.
Women can get help for their drug addiction.
It is hard to beat drug addiction. But the woman who uses drugs can get better with the right kind of treatment -- even if she has tried to
quit before and failed. Treatment is available, often close to home.
The first step is to find out what kind of treatment a woman needs and
where she can get it. If you are pregnant, live in the Los Angeles
area, and are unable to stop using drugs, call our center at (310)
571-4433 (or 1-800-R-HERE-4-U in So. Cal.) for a referral to a local
treatment program. Nationwide, call the free National Drug Information
Treatment and Referral Line. 1-800-662-HELP 1-800-66-AYUDA. Women who
get treatment can rebuild their lives.
Source: "Women and Drug Abuse,"
Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service,
National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Drug Abuse, NIH
Publication No. 94-3732, 1994. National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information
The best way to keep yourself and your baby healthy
is to avoid getting AIDS in the first place. Risky behaviors, like drug
use, having sex with a man who uses drugs, and prostitution can put a
woman and her baby at risk for AIDS, drug addiction, and other
diseases. A latex or silicone condom can help reduce the risk, but the
best solution is to simply not have sex with someone if there's a
chance he could be HIV positive.
HEALTH WARNING:
Women who have induced abortions have an increased risk of HIV-1 infection of 172%. (Researchers are at least 99% confident of this result.)
"Significantly higher prevalences of
infection [HIV-1] were associated with induced abortion (0.49%) than
with delivery (0.18%) (OR: 2.72; 95% CI: 2.29-3.22)" - European Journal of Epidemiology, "Deliveries, abortion and HIV-1 infection in Rome, 1989-1994," 1997,13:373-378. |
The good news is a pregnant, HIV positive woman will
not usually give her child the disease. There is a 75% chance that the
child will be completely unaffected if the HIV+ mother does nothing.
The odds of having an uninfected child are less than 8% if the mother
is treated with ZDV (AZT) during the pregnancy. For this reason it is
recommended that all pregnant women avail themselves of an HIV test as
soon as pregnancy is discovered.
Because the child takes on the mother's immune
system, the infant will have HIV antibodies, subsequently testing
positive after birth. Not until the child is eighteen months old can it
be known for certain whether or not he or she is actually infected with
the AIDS virus. It has even been documented that some infected infants
clear themselves of the AIDS virus. Although most children who do
contract AIDS have poor prognoses, some lead healthy and relatively
unaffected lives. If the prospect of raising a child with AIDS is too
difficult, there are families who are willing to adopt HIV+ babies.
Source of Medical Information: UCLA AIDS Institute Perspectives, 4(1), Winter 1996.
In early pregnancy the cells of the unborn child are
diving rapidly, and large doses of radiation can be hazardous.
Therefore pregnant women should avoid exposure to x-rays if at all
possible. If you've had x-rays then later discovered that you were
pregnant, it's understandable you would be concerned. The good news is
that according to the American Association of Physicists in Medicine
(AAPM), a unborn child exposed to 1 rem of radiation has less than one
chance in a thousand of suffering birth defects as a result of the
exposure, even if exposed during the most critical stages of
development (3 to 8 weeks of pregnancy). The "natural" risk of
congenital defect is much greater than any potential added risk from
the x-rays.
The risk to the baby is practically nil for the following exposures:
- dental x-rays, even without a lead apron
- diagnostic x-rays of the head, spine, chest or abdomen
- barium enema
- IVP
- living near a nuclear power plant
- working as an x-ray technologist (following good radiation safety guidelines)
- x-rays to the fathers testicles just prior to conception
According to AAPM, "...both the American College of
Radiology and the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology have
adopted a policy that rarely if ever is termination of pregnancy
advisable because of the radiation risk arising from diagnostic x-ray
examinations."
Source of Technical Information: "A
Primer on Low-Level Ionizing Radiation and Its Biological Effects,"
Published for the American Association of Physicists in Medicine by the
American Institute of Physics, AAPM Report No. 18, 335 E. 45th Street,
NY, NY 10017, 1986.
For more information on Pregnancy and Radiation, visit the Health Physics Society.
Cigarette smoking during pregnancy can cause serious
health problems to an unborn child. Smoking during pregnancy has been
linked to premature labor, breathing problems, and fatal illness among
infants.
An estimated 430,700 Americans die each year from
diseases caused by smoking. Smoking is responsible for an estimated one
in five U.S. deaths and costs the U.S. at least $97.2 billion each year
in health care costs and lost productivity.
Smoking
during pregnancy is estimated to account for 20 to 30 percent of
low-birth weight babies, up to 14 percent of preterm deliveries, and
some 10 percent of all infant deaths. Maternal smoking during and after
pregnancy has been linked to asthma among infants and young children.
In 1996, 13.6 percent of mothers were reported to have smoked during
pregnancy.
Smokers inhale nicotine and carbon monoxide, which
reach the baby through the placenta and prevent the fetus from getting
the nutrients and oxygen needed to grow. Secondhand smoke also adds a
risk to pregnancy. Breast milk often contains whatever is in the
woman's body. If the woman smokes, the baby ingests the nicotine in her
breast milk.
Reducing frequency of smoking may not benefit the
baby. A pregnant woman who reduces her smoking pattern or switches to
lower tar cigarettes may inhale more deeply or take more puffs to get
the same amount of nicotine as before.
The most effective way to protect the fetus is to
quit smoking. If a woman plans to conceive a child in the near future,
quitting is essential. A woman who quits within the first three or four
months of pregnancy can lower the chances of her baby being born
premature or with health problems related to smoking. Pregnancy is a
great time for a woman to quit. No matter how long she has been
smoking, her body benefits from her quitting because it lessens her
chances of developing future tobacco-related health problems, such as
lung and heart disease, and cancer.
Source: American Lung Association Fact Sheet, "Smoking and Pregnancy," September 1999 |