Pubdate: Sun, 06 Aug 2000 Source: Akron Beacon-Journal (OH) Copyright: 2000 by the Beacon Journal Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.ohio.com/bj/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?abeacon Author: Carol Biliczky COCAINE BABIES Long-Term Effects Preventable Eight-month-old Solomon gurgled and crawled, supremely unaware that luck may be with him. The Akron infant was exposed to cocaine in the womb, but his future may be much brighter than was once feared for cocaine babies. Gone are the dire predictions of just 10 years ago that they would be doomed to lives of mental retardation and developmental delays, burdening schools, the health care system and society. While drug exposure is hardly a prescription for a healthy baby, many children seem to be emerging from the trauma with few or no problems. Many of the early studies extrapolated from small numbers of very sick babies, experts say, and gave misleading information. "There was a lot of hysteria, but it's not been documented that there's significant effects to cocaine," said Dr. Ellen Hutchins, chief of the perinatal and women's health branch of the U.S. Maternal and Child Care Center. When cocaine and its smoked derivative, crack, peaked in popularity in the late 1980s, drug-abusing women nationwide were having 375,000 babies a year. Based on Ohio Department of Health estimates that 10 percent of babies were affected, 700 drug-affected babies were born in Summit County each year. "It's a muddy picture," said Dr. Jane Holan, medical director of Akron's Blick Clinic. "You have the immediate effect" -- trembling, nervousness, hard to pacify -- when the baby is born, she said. "But down the road, they do well in a good, stable environment." A 1998 University of Florida study found that three in four children exposed to cocaine suffer no more ill effects than children who were not exposed to the drug. But there haven't been a lot of long-term studies about what happens to these children. Vicki Fisher, a nursing administrator at the women's halfway house at Edwin Shaw Hospital in Lakemore, said it's important to get newborns out of drug-infested environments. Fisher said that drug-abusing mothers have many problems -- such as housing, parenting, education and employment -- in addition to kicking the habit. These make it difficult to invest much energy in their children. Solomon's story That's what's happened to little Solomon. He's in permanent custody of the Summit County Children Services Board until a suitable permanent home can be found. In the meantime, foster mother Kelly Harrison lavishes attention on him, and the results seem positive. He's engaging and cheerful, a lover of cheese curls and banana baby food. He was taken from his mother days after his birth; Harrison, a single mother of two other children, is the only parent he knows. "He can't stand to have me or his baby sitter out of his sight," she says proudly, dabbing a kiss on the top of his head as he reaches for a plastic toy box in their toy-strewn living room. "He's just a normal, healthy little boy." Foster parents' views Lily Morris and her husband, Randy, of Portage County took a drug-exposed girl into their home just two days after her birth and kept her for more than two years. Lily Morris calls the results remarkable. "Actually, she was advanced," said Morris, who asked that the name of her community not be used. "We took the time to work with her every day. When you work with a child that's drug-exposed, they can advance very quickly." Of the six cocaine babies that Renee Jones of Akron has fostered, most are doing well. "I didn't have any bad cases," she said. "They had the shakes when I first got them, but after that you would just really never know they had it." The 3-year-old girl she cares for now was premature, weighing only 4 pounds, 5 ounces at birth. But she's doing well: She is potty-trained, speaks clearly and is teaching her 3-year-old foster brother to dress himself, Jones said. Birth mother keeps kids That Latoni Watkins' children are doing well may be surprising. The Akron woman said she smoked crack cocaine laced with marijuana -- a so-called primo -- while pregnant with two of her three children. Her 2-year-old son has asthma, but otherwise seems OK. She said her daughter, now 6, is bright although "a little evil" in a mischievous way when she wants her way. "I thought if anyone would have had problems, it would have been her, but she's never sick," said Watkins, who said she is clean of drugs and working toward a degree in chemical dependency counseling at the University of Akron. "And if there's going to be any problems with him, I feel personally that they will come out when he goes to school." She worries that her children eventually may pay for her mistakes, no matter how healthy they seem. "You can imagine what a roller coaster I've been on," she said. Morris of Portage County thinks she sees some of that damage in a girl she fosters. Born premature and farmed out at first to a relative of the birth mother, the girl didn't come to the Morrises until she was almost 2 -- which means she spent too much time in an unhealthy environment, Morris thinks. Now 3, the girl is walking and talking, but developmentally she is about a year behind other children her age and may be mildly retarded, Morris said. No required testing All the numbers of affected babies are estimates. Ohio and many other states don't test for cocaine at birth, relying instead on doctors' voluntary reports of an infant's problems. But for now, these numbers don't mean much to Kelly Harrison. She doesn't see the problems -- crossed eyes, mobility problems, developmental delays, crying and tremors -- in Solomon that she has seen in two other drug-exposed babies she has fostered. Despite the early setbacks, both children are doing well, and she's hopeful. Some babies will come out OK no matter what, Harrison said with a shrug: "Its the way God wants it." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek