Pubdate: Wed, 28 Mar 2001
Source: Daily Herald (IL)
Copyright: 2001 The Daily Herald Company
Contact:  P.O. Box 280, Arlington Heights, IL 60006-0280
Fax: (847) 427-1301
Website: http://www.dailyherald.com/

STUDY DEBUNKS 'CRACK BABIES'

Associated Press --The "crack baby" phenomenon is overblown, 
according to a study that suggests poverty and the use of cigarettes, 
alcohol and other drugs while pregnant are just as likely as cocaine 
to cause developmental problems in children.

Blaming such problems on prenatal cocaine use alone has unfairly 
stigmatized children, creating an unfounded fear in teachers that 
"crack kids" will be backward and disruptive, according to the study, 
an analysis of 36 previous studies.

"I'm not trying to be Pollyanna-ish and say there are not problems" 
with cocaine use by pregnant women, said Dr. Deborah A. Frank, an 
associate professor of pediatrics at Boston University who led the 
analysis. "I'm saying there are many more serious risks to children's 
development." The analysis appears in Wednesday's Journal of the 
American Medical Association.

The perception that crack babies are a unique phenomenon stems from 
an overreaction to research that did not adequately take into account 
such factors as family environment and cocaine mothers' use of other 
substances while pregnant, the researchers said.

Women who use cocaine while pregnant often smoke, drink, take other 
illegal drugs and live in poverty or otherwise unhealthy environments.

These factors can explain all or some of the problems once solely 
blamed on cocaine's presumed effects on the developing fetus, such as 
low birth weight, small head size, low scores on mental-development 
tests and behavioral problems such as attention deficits, the 
researchers said.

Alan Leshner, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, said 
that while researchers believe the effects of prenatal cocaine 
exposure "are not nearly as dramatic as people initially thought," 
the study should not be misinterpreted to suggest that cocaine during 
pregnancy isn't harmful.

"Most of the effects are thought to be on behavioral characteristics, 
most of which won't be apparent until kids are getting older," 
Leshner said.

Whether prenatal cocaine use can cause developmental problems that do 
not appear until after age 6 or at puberty is being studied.

In an accompanying editorial, Dr. Wendy Chavkin of Columbia 
University said the crack baby "has become a convenient symbol for an 
aggressive war on drug users because of the implication that anyone 
who is selfish enough to irreparably damage a child for the sake of a 
quick high deserves retribution."

"This image, promoted by the mass media, makes it easier to advocate 
a simplistic, punitive response than to address the complex causes of 
drug use," she said.

The JAMA study follows last week's Supreme Court ruling barring 
public hospitals from testing pregnant women for drugs and giving the 
results to police without consent. That case involved a South 
Carolina hospital's now-abandoned drug-testing policy, designed to 
stop pregnant women from harming fetuses by using crack. It resulted 
in 30 arrests.

Frank was among doctors and medical groups, including the American 
Medical Association, who filed briefs opposing the drug-testing 
policy.

Pharmacologist John A. Harvey, co-editor of a 1997 New York Academy 
of Sciences report that linked prenatal cocaine exposure with subtle 
neurological damage, said Frank's review muddles science with 
politics.

"They play up the problems of tobacco and alcohol very appropriately 
... and then they say, 'Well, cocaine is no worse,'" said Harvey, of 
MCP Hahnemann University in Philadelphia. "Well, that makes it pretty 
bad."

Smoking and drinking during pregnancy have been linked to 
developmental and behavioral problems in children.

Animal studies suggest cocaine use alone in pregnancy hampers nerve 
cell development in the fetal brain, resulting in behavioral problems 
that get worse with age, Harvey said.
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