Pubdate: Fri, 23 Dec 2005
Source: Charleston Daily Mail (WV)
Copyright: 2005 Charleston Daily Mail
Contact:  http://www.dailymail.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/76
Author: Kris Wise, Daily Mail Capitol reporter
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

MORE W.VA. BABIES ARE BORN ADDICTED

Children of Mothers Using OxyContin, Meth, Methadone Are Born in Withdrawal

West Virginia, and particularly its southern counties, is struggling 
with an increase in births of babies addicted to methamphetamine and 
OxyContin. Even more common, at least in the Charleston area, are 
babies born to mothers who are receiving medical doses of methadone 
- -- also an addictive drug -- to try and get over their other drug 
addictions. Doctors still are trying to figure out the long-term 
effects of such substances on newborns, but the short-term side 
effects seem to be even worse than problems seen with the so-called 
"crack babies" born in the 1980s, doctors said.

The effects of methamphetamine on the tiniest of patients are even 
more challenging for physicians to figure out.

"It's really hard to separate all the different effects," said Dr. 
Stefan Maxwell, chief of neonatology for Charleston Area Medical 
Center's Women and Children's Hospital. "Most of these people are 
party drug users. If they use one, they're using others."

Maxwell and his team of obstetricians have seen increased numbers of 
babies born to mothers addicted to the newly trendy and deadly drugs 
over the past several years.

With the rise in use of heroin and other opiates among West 
Virginians, and the appearance of methadone clinics in the state that 
try to wean users off such drugs, more and more women are getting 
pregnant while still in the throes of their addiction, Maxwell said.

The difference between pregnant women who use various types of drugs 
is that while cocaine users might pass on health problems to their 
babies, the infants are not born going through withdrawal.

Babies born to cocaine-addicted mothers are small and often have a 
host of physical problems connected to their size. They have small 
lungs and often suffer from breathing problems, and their organs 
often don't function properly. "Babies born after OxyContin and 
methadone use aren't necessarily small at a gestational age," Maxwell 
said. "It's that they're going through withdrawal."

Methadone, OxyContin, heroin and other similar drugs all penetrate 
the placenta, giving babies in the womb proportional doses of the 
drugs their mothers take.

When they are born, infants need and crave the drug that was in their 
mother's system. If they don't get it, they go through a dangerous 
withdrawal phase just like adults.

"They are jittery, they are tremulous, they sometimes are sweating 
and they don't eat properly," Maxwell said. "It's what we call 
narcotic withdrawal. It's the same thing."

After birth, the babies are given gradually decreasing doses of 
methadone no matter what drug had been in their system. They are 
slowly weaned off the drug until their addiction has passed.

But the process is a long one. It's one of the biggest challenges for 
doctors and hospitals dealing with drug-addicted newborns. The 
extended length of a hospital stay is hard on the infant, drains 
hospital resources and in most cases, costs more public dollars. The 
majority of these patients' medical care is on the government's tab. 
"These babies are in the hospital for at least three weeks just 
trying to wean them off," Maxwell said. "This is a four-or five-week 
hospital stay for a baby who should be in and out in two days."

Maxwell couldn't immediately provide statistics on how many babies in 
Charleston or in the state have been born with such addictions. But 
he said this year's births were up over last year's, and Charleston 
Area Medical Center has been receiving more referrals to help treat 
addicted newborns born in more rural parts of the state.

The addiction-counseling group Narcotics Anonymous reports on its Web 
site that in most states, hospitals have seen the annual number of 
such births double or triple in the past 10 years.

Kanawha County Metro Drug Unit Commander Chuck Carpenter said 
recently that the unit usually finds children living in the midst of 
the drug selling and manufacturing going on in many homes around the 
county. "We see infants and we see 18 and 19-year-olds," Carpenter 
said. Kanawha County Prosecutor Bill Charnock's office has prosecuted 
more than 80 people for selling or manufacturing methamphetamine over 
the past year. Charnock would not specifically discuss cases of 
pregnant woman found using or selling that and other drugs, but he 
said from his experience, the numbers are constantly increasing 
around the state.

Just last month, a St. Albans couple was arrested in connection with 
the February death of their infant son, 3-month-old Jacob McFarland. 
A judge issued a warrant for the parents' arrest on charges of 
neglect leading to his death. A report later released by the state 
Department of Health and Human Resources said the baby had been born 
with a drug addiction, was put on methadone and spent more than three 
weeks in the hospital, but he was never brought back for follow-up treatment.
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