Pubdate: Mon, 09 Apr 2007
Source: Standard, The (St. Catharines, CN ON)
Copyright: 2007 The Standard
Contact:  http://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/676
Author: Dr. Gifford-Jones

DRINKING EXCESSIVELY DURING PREGNANCY IS MADNESS

It's an ideal way to write a column. I'm attending a medical
conference while cruising the Caribbean sea. But don't think I'm
goofing off. I'm spending long days listening to a variety of
international speakers. But as a former ship's surgeon I also love
being at sea.

One speaker, Dr. George Carson, director of fetal medicine at the
University of Regina, reported on the use of alcohol in pregnancy.

Some authorities have a simple solution for the tragic habit of
drinking alcohol during pregnancy. Dr. Christine Lock, associate
professor of pediatrics at the University of British Columbia, says
it's a myth that only irresponsible derelict mothers cause serious
birth defects. Her blunt message, "If we drink in pregnancy we place
our children at risk."

Dr. Carson said Dr. Locke's approach is indeed simple, but he
questioned whether it is good policy. He stressed that pregnancy is
not a disease and that we're scaring pregnant women half to death when
they have a single glass of wine.

He presented data that showed moderate consumption of alcohol during
the first 12 weeks of pregnancy is not associated with increased risk
of fetal abnormalities. Plus, some studies show there is a benefit to
having one alcoholic drink a day.

However Drs. Locke, Carson and I all abhor the effects of excessive
drinking during pregnancy. To destroy yourself with alcohol makes no
sense. Even worse, destroying an infant physically and mentally before
birth is maternal madness. But year after year in this country,
alcohol-riddled babies are born suffering from fetal alcohol syndrome
(FAS).

Health Canada estimates nine in every 1,000 babies born in this
country have some form of FAS and one in three of these babies will
have the severe form, with wide-set eyes, thin upper lips, low birth
weight and small head circumference. Five ounces of absolute alcohol a
day, or binge drinking, can cause this medical and social disaster.

Another medical catastrophe, reported by Dr. Carson, is substance
abuse and HIV infected babies. Today women are the fastest growing
group of persons with new HIV infections. He cited a typical case, a
24-year-old woman seen in the emergency department of a hospital. She
was agitated by a severely infected vein from repeated drug
injections. Tests soon revealed she was pregnant, had HIV, hepatitis
C, gonorrhea, chlamydia and had been using cocaine and marijuana.

Hearing of this case initially made me think, "My God! Suppose this
had been my mother! What a disastrous way to start life!"

Today, sexual activity is occurring at an earlier age. And "party
drugs" such as ecstasy are linked to unsafe sexual behaviour and
HIV-infected babies.

It's tragic for mothers to be infected with the AIDS virus. But not to
get treatment compounds the problem. Dr. Carson reported that 15 per
cent of all HIV-infected women receive no prenatal care in the U.S.
compared to two per cent of the general population.

For untreated women who do not breastfeed, 20 to 30 per cent of babies
will be infected with HIV. But an additional 15 to 20 per cent will
become infected with the virus during breast feeding.

What a horrendous disaster! The cost to taxpayers runs into hundreds
of millions of dollars. But what about these babies? It's ironic that
anti-abortionists always cry to High Heaven about the rights of the
fetus. But don't these same babies have rights?

I realize it's impossible to prevent irresponsible, drug-ridden women
from getting pregnant. But Dr. Carson related cases of HIV women
getting pregnant over and over again. Good sense dictates that there
should be legislation that allows society to sterilize these women.
Surely children should have the right be protected from such
irresponsible mothers. But it won't happen. No one in authority has
the intestinal fortitude to even mention this possibility.

In time I'll report on less-troubling medical information from this
sea course. But I'm amazed at how few physicians are aware of these
courses. Any physician who wants information about them can contact me
at  For overworked doctors, it's a great way
to keep up-to-date on medical matters, meet colleagues and return home
more relaxed.
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MAP posted-by: Derek