Pubdate: Fri, 16 Oct 1998 Source: Saint Paul Pioneer Press (MN) Contact: 651-228-5564 Website: http://www.pioneerplanet.com/ Copyright: 1998 PioneerPlanet / St. Paul (Minnesota) Pioneer Press - All Author: Paul Bischke CRACK(ED) REPORTING Reports, like your Oct 6 news brief, that discuss "crack babies" out of context, mislead the public. Where drug-induced harm to the unborn is concerned, fetal alcohol syndrome is far and away the most serious issue, followed by tobacco's effects. Media emphasis on smokeable cocaine distracts attention from a common, high-damage problem in the mainstream (maternal alcohol use) to a rare, lower-damage problem among a scapegoat class (crack mothers). Without apologizing for their misleading coverage of crack (see the 1994 book "Cracked Coverage", Duke Univ. Press), major media outlets have gone on to sensationalize methamphetamine in a recent barrage of local and network-level TV reports. The cycle is predictable: new drug, [sensationalized] reporting, harsher laws, big crackdown, to be followed by an altered drug market, another new drug, more [sensationalized] reporting, ad nauseum. Hype yields great media drama but poor public policies -- like Draconian crack laws and forthcoming meth laws that pack prisons with non-violent offenders. Good reporting on drug issues addresses complex facts that don't always tell a juicy or familiar story. Unexpected facts, like alcohol being the greatest threat to the unborn, should be explained. Such even-handedness is a lot to ask in our tabloid era of Monica, Jerry Springer, and "Cops", but it's indispensable to civic health. Paul Bischke St. Paul - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry