Pubdate: Mon, 21 Nov 2005
Source: Salt Lake Tribune (UT)
Copyright: 2005 The Salt Lake Tribune
Contact:  http://www.sltrib.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/383
Author: Kirsten Stewart
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

DRUG-EXPOSED BABIES NOT THE LOST CAUSES MANY THINK

Treatment Is Key: Some Doctors Say That Postnatal Neglect Is The Bigger Issue

During the mid-1980s, so-called crack babies became an  icon of the 
havoc wreaked by cocaine and a catalyst for  new laws targeting pregnant women.

Hospitals began testing pregnant women for the drug and  states 
started jailing addicted mothers and taking  custody of their 
children. The media warned of the  creation of an underclass of 
exposed infants born with  devastating birth defects and permanent 
brain damage.

Twenty years of medical research have shown the  prenatal effects of 
cocaine to be far less severe than  the "crack baby" legend suggests. 
But the myth has  resurfaced with the spread of methamphetamine and 
led  to new labels: "meth babies" and "ice babies."

"As a country, we're on the verge of making the same  mistakes with 
meth as we made with cocaine," said Brown  University researcher 
Barry Lester. Lester is among 90  doctors and psychologists who 
recently signed an open  letter urging the media to avoid such 
labels, which they say lack scientific validity and stigmatize  children.

"Drug use needs to be treated as an illness and not a  criminal 
activity," said Lester, director of Brown  Medical School's Infant 
Development Center in  Providence, RI. "The labels demonize women, 
but it's  the kids who really suffer. If we expect a child to  fail, 
he'll fail, and it won't have anything to do with  the drug."

This is not to say that crystal methamphetamine is harmless.

Sharon P. McCully, a 3rd District juvenile judge in  Salt Lake City, 
estimates that about 90 percent of the  mothers she sees in child 
welfare cases are addicted to  the powerful stimulant.

"We do know if mom is using meth, the kids are  neglected," said 
McCully. "These parents become  consumed with the next high and can 
sleep for hours  when they finally crash. They may not abuse their 
kids,  but they often neglect them."

No state agency collects data on the number of babies  born in Utah 
testing positive for methamphetamine.

According to the state Division of Child and Family  Services (DCFS), 
alcohol or drugs were a contributing  factor in roughly 80 percent of 
the 1,100 child custody  cases in 2004. But how many of those cases 
are  meth-related is unknown.

Mothers and their newborns are not routinely tested for  illegal 
drugs, which is left to the discretion of  individual doctors and 
hospitals. If a baby or mother  test positive, the physician is 
required by law to  notify DCFS.

"Most doctors will test, because they don't want the  liability of 
losing a baby," said Wendy Anderson, a  spokeswoman for the National 
Advocates for Pregnant  Women in New York City. "Lack of prenatal 
care can make  doctors suspicious, or if the mother isn't 
gaining  weight or has marks on her arm."

Anderson said the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that a  mother needs 
to be notified she is being tested, which  is akin to a criminal 
search of her body.

"Where it gets sketchy is when pregnant women check  into hospitals 
to deliver, they are signing consent  forms left and right without 
reading them," said  Anderson.

To date, there is no conclusive research on the  long-term effects of 
meth in the womb.

But Lester is among a group of researchers hoping to  change that. 
Granted $6 million by the National  Institute on Drug Abuse, he and 
others have been  studying the development of meth-exposed children 
from  five cities. The study is still young. But Lester said  so far, 
"the effects we're seeing at birth are very  similar to effects we 
saw with cocaine."

Infants exposed to cocaine or its crystallized cousin,  crack, tend 
to weigh less than non-exposed babies.  Their IQ scores are 3 to 4 
points lower on average and  they exhibit a slight increase in 
behavior and attention problems - similar to the effects caused 
by  cigarette smoking.

"There are subtle differences. Nurses will sometimes  describe 
meth-exposed babies as being in an insulated  sleep state. They're 
hard to arouse and when they do  wake, hard to soothe," said Lester. 
"But you're not  looking at a baby who will wind up 
institutionalized. You're looking at a baby who is very treatable."

More than the chemical effects of a drug, children born  to 
substance-abusing parents face other risks.

"Whether the biologic risk manifests itself often has a  lot to do 
with the postnatal environment," said Karen  Buchi, a pediatrician at 
the University of Utah. "It's  not just the drug, it's the lifestyle 
you lead when  you're an addicted person. Addicts tend to engage in 
risky behavior."

But Lester says, contrary to reports of meth being  instantly 
addicting and impossible to kick, treatment  works.

The federal government's most recent National Survey on  Drug Use and 
Health found that 4.9 percent of Americans  have used methamphetamine 
at some point in their lives,  but 0.6 percent used it within the past year.

Luciano Colonna, executive director of the Harm  Reduction Project of 
Utah, said studies show women  succeed better in treatment when they 
are allowed to  continue rearing their children.

Children allowed to stay with their moms also fare much  better than 
those swept into foster care, said Colonna.  "These aren't pregnant 
women who become substance  abusers, they're substance abusers who 
get pregnant.  You can be a bad parent and a drug user, but being 
a  drug user doesn't necessarily make you a bad parent."

Advocates are pressing policymakers to abandon  proposals to punish addicts.

Speaking earlier this year to a congressional committee  exploring 
solutions to stop the spread of  methamphetamine, Lester urged states 
to enact  legislation protecting mothers who voluntarily seek  drug 
treatment from having their children taken away.

Utah babies at risk

One juvenile judge in Salt Lake City estimates 90  percent of the 
mothers she sees in child welfare cases  are addicted to 
methamphetamine. Infants taken from  mothers using drugs, including 
meth, made news in  several Salt Lake County cases this year:

lAn infant girl was abandoned at a Salt Lake City  homeless shelter 
in March after testing positive for  heroin at birth. Her mother, 
Bobbie Joe Ramirez, has a  history of drug abuse and four other 
children had previously been taken by child welfare workers.

lChild welfare caseworkers took custody of a girl in  August born two 
months premature via Caesarean-section  to a woman killed in a 
gunbattle over drugs and money.  The girl was born with cocaine, 
opiates and  barbiturates in her system. The mother, Darla Marie 
Woundedhead, had lost custody of three other children.

lMethamphetamine user Tammaria Gehring, seven months  pregnant, was 
booked into the Salt Lake County jail in  September at the request of 
a state judge who feared  for the baby's health. The jail made an 
exception to  its ban on booking pregnant women. In October, Gehring, 
30, checked into a treatment program with her newborn  daughter.

lChild welfare workers in October took a 2-day-old girl  from mother 
Mallissa Kooyman, who a year earlier  pleaded guilty to a drug charge 
after police discovered  baggies of methamphetamine in her purse. 
Kooyman, 24,  had previously been found to have abused or neglected 
her six other children, most of whom have been adopted.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman