Pubdate: Fri, 23 Nov 2001 Source: Australian Associated Press (Australia Wire) Copyright: 2001 Australian Associated Press Author: Rada Rouse, National Medical Correspondent HEROIN USE IN LISMORE REGION HITTING BABIES - STUDY Narcotics abuse among pregnant women in the northern rivers region of NSW results in a high rate of newborns suffering withdrawal and stillbirths, a study has shown. Pediatricians who conducted the survey at Lismore Base Hospital also found that nearly 90 per cent of the drug-taking mothers tested positive for hepatitis C. Dr Christopher Ingall and registrar Dr Rebecca Richardson warned that more than half of these women were missing out on antenatal care and their babies had multiple problems including prematurity and growth retardation. The incidence of substance abuse among pregnant women in the region was ten times higher than the latest available figures for metropolitan areas of Australia, recorded in the early 1980s. While the rate of stillbirths for the northern rivers region generally was 0.6 per cent, the rate for drug-abusing women was four per cent, the study found. Low birth weight and premature birth rates generally hovered around five per cent, but the rate for babies of addicted mothers in Lismore was about 25 per cent. The study found that all of the drug-dependent women were smokers and one-third of them had a mental health disorder. Pediatrician Dr Ian Lennon said the hospital was responding to the survey by establishing a multi-disciplinary antenatal team including obstetricians and social workers. It would address housing as well as health needs, he said. "A pilot study is being conducted right now to establish the needs of drug-dependent women," Dr Lennon told AAP. "The hospital regards it as an urgent issue." The study of 6,800 births over five years looked at 49 women identified as substance abusers, excluding those who use marijuana and/or alcohol only. Thirty-seven mothers were prescribed methadone, but 14 of them also continued to use heroin. Eleven injected heroin only, one woman injected amphetamines only, and many of them also used marijuana, benzodiazepines or rohypnol. The study, published in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, revealed that northern rivers babies exposed to drugs in the womb ended up much sicker than their counterparts in metropolitan areas. Seventy per cent of substance-exposed infants born in Lismore hospital suffered neonatal withdrawal syndrome compared to 30 per cent in metropolitan areas. The pediatricians said the study was the first in Australia to evaluate substance abuse among pregnant women in non-metropolitan, regional Australia. "Regional areas struggle with social, economic and demographic changes, rural health workforce shortages and problems of inadequate access to services," they said. "The added burden of substance abuse on these communities can be devastating." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake