Can Moderate Alcohol Use During Pregnancy Be Linked to Behavior Problems in Children?
March 25, 2009 by maureen
Filed under Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD)
Can moderate alcohol use during pregnancy be linked to behavioral problems in children was the question addressed in a recent study. The findings were published in the Dec. 6, 2008 issue of the journal Pediatrics.
Below is a summary of the report.
Women who consume even one alcoholic drink weekly while pregnant are more likely to have children with behavioral problems than women who abstain, Reuters Health reported Dec. 3.Researchers reviewed data from the Minnesota Twins Family Study, focusing on 1,252 17-year-old participants and their parents, and found that 31 percent of children whose mothers reported drinking at least one drink per week while pregnant were diagnosed with conduct disorders as teenagers, compared to 21 percent among teens whose mothers did not drink during pregnancy.
The study authors also found that 44 percent of mothers diagnosed with alcoholism who drank during pregnancy had children with conduct disorders, more than twice the rate among alcoholic mothers who abstained while pregnant.
Mothers who drank during pregnancy (13 percent) were also more likely to smoke, but when the researchers controlled for smoking and other behaviors, they found that prenatal alcohol exposure was independently linked to higher prevalence of behavioral problems such as shoplifting, aggression towards animals and people, and arson.
“If women stop drinking during pregnancy, they can save themselves a lot of heartache later,” said study author Elizabeth Disney of Chase Braxton Health Services in Baltimore, Md. “Being the parent of a child with conduct disorder is really frustrating.”
FASD Center For Excellence-What’s New?
March 17, 2009 by rosie
Filed under Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD)
The FASD Center For Excellence has posted some updated news that will be of interest to parents and professionals.
Read this exciting compilation of news, research and annoucements.
Elevated Blood Lead Levels in Children Improves Over the Last 20 Years
March 5, 2009 by ellen
Filed under Childhood Issues, Environmental Issues
According to an article in the Washington Post, a study in the journal, Pediatrics, has found a reduction in the number of children with high blood lead levels when compared to blood lead levels in children 20 years ago.
Stillbirth – New Guidelines Encouraging Autopsies
March 4, 2009 by ellen
Filed under Prenatal Issues
According to an article that appeared in the Daily Women’s Health Policy Report, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynocologists (ACOG) has issued new guidelines encouraging autopsies after stillbirth in an effort to learn more about the causes of stillbirth.


