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Drinking While Pregnant

ANTI-DRINKING

VEHEMENTLY ANTI-DRINKING

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DR. GREENE
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DR. SEARS
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MEDIA INDIA
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NBC
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AMER. JOURNAL PREVENTIVE MED

THE BABBLE TAKE

While you may have a sneaking suspicion that one glass of wine is not going to damage your baby beyond repair, few if any American medical professionals seem willing to go on record saying as much. Most authorities are unequivocal on the topic: "Just don't do it." Studies have shown that drinking while pregnant may increase your child's future risk of alcoholism, and that as little as two glasses of wine per day may cause fetal alcohol syndrome (symptoms include facial abnormalities, low IQ and hyperactivity). Some medical textbooks still condone light alcohol intake during pregnancy, and many perfectly normal adults had mothers who had the occasional drink during pregnancy. While doctors like Karen Filkins, an associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at UCLA School of Medicine, say there is likely no reason to panic if you got a little tipsy at a party before you knew you were pregnant, there are no known lower limits of safety for alcohol intake while pregnant. So for those who want to be on the safe side, abstinence might be the only answer.

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    DON'T DO IT: Dr. Greene "Alcohol During Pregnancy"

    The first trimester of pregnancy can be a vulnerable time. Some medicines taken during that period can have catastrophic effects on the baby. The third trimester is generally safer. Evidence published in the February 11, 2000 issue of Science suggests that drinking alcohol even once during the third trimester can permanently damage the brain of a baby. Alcohol has its biggest effects when the synapses (connections) of the brain are being formed — during the last trimester of pregnancy and the early childhood years. When the developing baby is exposed to alcohol for even a few hours, a number of brain cells and synapses are permanently deleted. ...read the full article

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    FOR REAL, NOT EVEN A GLASS OF WINE: Dr. Sears "Avoid Alcohol"

    The harmful effects of alcohol on the developing baby were recognized in the early 1900s, when physicians observed an increase in the number of malformations occurring in babies born nine months after certain European drinking festivals. Unfortunately, any alcohol you drink will get into your baby's blood, just as it does into yours — and at the same levels. ...read the full article

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    SERIOUSLY, UNLESS YOU WANT YOUR KID TO BE A DRUNK: Media India "Mother's Drinking May Increase Child's Alcoholism Risk"

    Children born to moms who drank during their pregnancy are at increased risk of drinking problems by the time they are 21, a new study finds. ...read the full article

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    DRUNK AND DEFORMED: NBC "New Study Says Even One Drink At Conception Could Be Harmful"

    " Eighty percent of obstetricians tell pregnant women that it is OK to drink during their pregnancy, but we know that cannot be". . .
    CRT study said even one drink can damage a baby, so it's safest if women stop drinking completely once they start trying to conceive." Any alcohol use at all during pregnancy produces about a three-times increase in risk for delinquency long term," said Chasnoff . . . Children born with fetal alcohol syndrome usually experience growth retardation, unusual facial features, and mental retardation.

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    FUN-LOVIN' MEDICAL TEXTBOOKS LESS STRICT: ABC News; American Journal of Preventive Medicine "Medical Textbooks Condone Drinking While Pregnant"

    Researchers at the Virginia Commonwealth University found that only 14 of the 81 medical textbooks reviewed had consistent recommendations not to drink. In textbooks published since 1991, only 7 of the 29 consistently recommended no alcohol during pregnancy. ...read the full article

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