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- <text id=89TT2267>
- <title>
- Aug. 28, 1989: Alcohol's Youngest Victims
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Aug. 28, 1989 World War II:50th Anniversary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 60
- Alcohol's Youngest Victims
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Drinking during pregnancy is riskier than many women realize
- </p>
- <p>By Andrea Dorfman
- </p>
- <p> Everyone should know by now that drinking alcohol during
- pregnancy can cause serious physical and mental problems in the
- unborn child. Most doctors have told their patients, television
- announcements have dramatized the dangers, and warning signs
- have gone up in restaurants and bars. But too many mothers-to-be
- are not getting the message. More than 50,000 babies are born
- in the U.S. each year with alcohol-related defects. In about
- one-fourth of these cases, the damage -- ranging from facial
- deformities to heart abnormalities -- is severe enough to be
- classified as fetal alcohol syndrome.
- </p>
- <p> Many people still do not realize how common FAS is and how
- devastating it can be. According to some researchers, FAS is
- responsible for an estimated 20% of all U.S. cases of mental
- retardation. That makes FAS the No. 1 threat to children's
- mental health, greater than either Down syndrome or spina
- bifida.
- </p>
- <p> Unlike such drugs as barbiturates and opiates, which affect
- the nervous system, alcohol can attack virtually any of the
- body's cells. It can cause stunted growth, distorted faces, poor
- eyesight, learning disabilities and hyperactivity. In the
- recently published book The Broken Cord (Harper & Row; $18.95),
- author Michael Dorris tells the heartbreaking story of his
- adopted son Adam, whose Sioux parents died of alcohol abuse.
- Adam was institutionalized and diagnosed as retarded before he
- turned three. At five, he still wore diapers, could not count
- consecutively or even identify colors. "Adam's birthdays are
- reminders for me," writes Dorris. "For each celebration
- commemorating that he was born, there is the pang, the rage,
- that he was not born whole."
- </p>
- <p> The tragedy of FAS is that it is entirely preventable. If
- a woman, even an alcoholic one, stops drinking before she tries
- to become pregnant, her fetus will not develop FAS or any
- alcohol-related birth defects. But pregnancies are not always
- planned. If a woman does not realize for several weeks that she
- is pregnant, she may not stop drinking in time to prevent harm
- to the fetus.
- </p>
- <p> Researchers believe the damage is probably minimal in the
- first two weeks, but during the rest of the first trimester,
- when the fetus' organs are forming, the effects may be
- especially severe. If the drinking continues, additional damage
- can occur, since the brain develops during all nine months and
- rapid body growth does not occur until the third trimester. Even
- after the baby is born, abstinence may be advisable. A study in
- last week's New England Journal of Medicine suggests that when
- mothers have one or more drinks a day, their children ingest
- alcohol in breast milk, which may impede the infants' motor
- development.
- </p>
- <p> Nearly all known cases of FAS involve children whose
- mothers have chronic alcohol problems. Says Barbara Morse,
- director of the Fetal Alcohol Education Program at the Boston
- University School of Medicine: "The more a woman drinks while
- she is pregnant and the longer she drinks, the higher the risk
- of FAS." Even so, moderate drinking is not considered safe. "Our
- best evidence is that we cannot detect adverse consequences to
- very light drinking," says Dr. Robert Sokol, head of the
- federally funded fetal alcohol research center at Wayne State
- University, in Detroit. "But that doesn't mean they don't
- exist." Beer, wine and hard liquor do not seem to differ in
- their impact on the fetus.
- </p>
- <p> Studies conducted in Boston, Atlanta and Scandinavia
- indicate that at least some of the injuries to the fetus may be
- corrected in the womb if a mother gives up alcohol before her
- third trimester. Says Sterling Clarren, professor of pediatrics
- at the University of Washington School of Medicine: "It's pretty
- clear if a woman stops drinking in her second trimester, the
- size and the healthiness of the baby will improve, but there is
- no evidence that its intelligence will improve." Moreover, even
- the improvement in appearance may be deceptive. "The babies
- definitely are bigger and look healthier," says Dr. Sokol, "but
- that doesn't mean that all the effects go away."
- </p>
- <p> Scientists still do not know why FAS strikes the children
- of some alcoholic mothers but not others, and why
- susceptibility varies among different ethnic groups. Native
- Americans, for example, are 33 times as likely as Caucasians to
- have a child with FAS; for blacks, the rate is 6.7 times as high
- as for Caucasians. Women who give birth to a child with FAS have
- a greater-than- average risk of bearing additional children with
- the affliction. Such evidence suggests there may be a genetic
- predisposition to FAS, but scientists have not been able to
- identify the offending genes.
- </p>
- <p> Researchers are also trying to determine whether fathers'
- drinking habits play any role in FAS. At Wayne State, studies
- of male laboratory rodents have shown that alcohol exposure
- affects their sperm as well as the immune system and behavior
- of their offspring. "I don't think the possibility of the
- father's effect can be written off," says Dr. Sokol. "We're not
- saying the baby would have FAS, but it's possible there may be
- some impact on how the kid comes out."
- </p>
- <p> There is no treatment for FAS, and so the only way health
- officials can fight the scourge is to step up educational
- efforts. In New Hampshire, for example, couples must read a
- pamphlet on FAS before they can obtain a marriage license.
- Beginning in November, liquor bottles will carry a
- cigarette-style warning label advising women that alcohol and
- pregnancy do not mix. But for women who are addicted to alcohol,
- the need to drink often overcomes caution and reason. Until
- better ways are found to identify and treat alcoholics, they
- will continue to inflict a devastating toll on their children.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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