Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jan 2009
Source: New York Times (NY)
Page: D1
Copyright: 2009 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Susan Okie
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/crack+babies

THE EPIDEMIC THAT WASN'T

BALTIMORE -- One sister is 14; the other is 9. They are a vibrant 
pair: the older girl is high-spirited but responsible, a solid 
student and a devoted helper at home; her sister loves to read and 
watch cooking shows, and she recently scored well above average on 
citywide standardized tests.

There would be nothing remarkable about these two happy, normal girls 
if it were not for their mother's history. Yvette H., now 38, admits 
that she used cocaine (along with heroin and alcohol) while she was 
pregnant with each girl. "A drug addict," she now says ruefully, 
"isn't really concerned about the baby she's carrying."

When the use of crack cocaine became a nationwide epidemic in the 
1980s and '90s, there were widespread fears that prenatal exposure to 
the drug would produce a generation of severely damaged children. 
Newspapers carried headlines like "Cocaine: A Vicious Assault on a 
Child," "Crack's Toll Among Babies: A Joyless View" and "Studies: 
Future Bleak for Crack Babies."

But now researchers are systematically following children who were 
exposed to cocaine before birth, and their findings suggest that the 
encouraging stories of Ms. H.'s daughters are anything but unusual. 
So far, these scientists say, the long-term effects of such exposure 
on children's brain development and behavior appear relatively small.

"Are there differences? Yes," said Barry M. Lester, a professor of 
psychiatry at Brown University who directs the Maternal Lifestyle 
Study, a large federally financed study of children exposed to 
cocaine in the womb. "Are they reliable and persistent? Yes. Are they big? No."

Cocaine is undoubtedly bad for the fetus. But experts say its effects 
are less severe than those of alcohol and are comparable to those of 
tobacco -- two legal substances that are used much more often by 
pregnant women, despite health warnings.

Surveys by the Department of Health and Human Services in 2006 and 
2007 found that 5.2 percent of pregnant women reported using any 
illicit drug, compared with 11.6 percent for alcohol and 16.4 percent 
for tobacco.

"The argument is not that it's O.K. to use cocaine in pregnancy, any 
more than it's O.K. to smoke cigarettes in pregnancy," said Dr. 
Deborah A. Frank, a pediatrician at Boston University. "Neither drug 
is good for anybody."

But cocaine use in pregnancy has been treated as a moral issue rather 
than a health problem, Dr. Frank said. Pregnant women who use illegal 
drugs commonly lose custody of their children, and during the 1990s 
many were prosecuted and jailed.

Cocaine slows fetal growth, and exposed infants tend to be born 
smaller than unexposed ones, with smaller heads. But as these 
children grow, brain and body size catch up.

At a scientific conference in November, Dr. Lester presented an 
analysis of a pool of studies of 14 groups of cocaine-exposed 
children -- 4,419 in all, ranging in age from 4 to 13. The analysis 
failed to show a statistically significant effect on I.Q. or language 
development. In the largest of the studies, I.Q. scores of exposed 
children averaged about 4 points lower at age 7 than those of 
unexposed children.

In tests that measure specific brain functions, there is evidence 
that cocaine-exposed children are more likely than others to have 
difficulty with tasks that require visual attention and "executive 
function" -- the brain's ability to set priorities and pay selective 
attention, enabling the child to focus on the task at hand.

Cocaine exposure may also increase the frequency of defiant behavior 
and poor conduct, according to Dr. Lester's analysis. There is also 
some evidence that boys may be more vulnerable than girls to behavior problems.

But experts say these findings are quite subtle and hard to 
generalize. "Just because it is statistically significant doesn't 
mean that it is a huge public health impact," said Dr. Harolyn M. 
Belcher, a neurodevelopmental pediatrician who is director of 
research at the Kennedy Krieger Institute's Family Center in Baltimore.

And Michael Lewis, a professor of pediatrics and psychiatry at the 
Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick, N.J., said that 
in a doctor's office or a classroom, "you cannot tell" which children 
were exposed to cocaine before birth.

He added that factors like poor parenting, poverty and stresses like 
exposure to violence were far more likely to damage a child's 
intellectual and emotional development -- and by the same token, 
growing up in a stable household, with parents who do not abuse 
alcohol or drugs, can do much to ease any harmful effects of prenatal 
drug exposure.

Possession of crack cocaine, the form of the drug that was widely 
sold in inner-city, predominantly black neighborhoods, has long been 
punished with tougher sentences than possession of powdered cocaine, 
although both forms are identically metabolized by the body and have 
the same pharmacological effects.

Dr. Frank, the pediatrician in Boston, says cocaine-exposed children 
are often teased or stigmatized if others are aware of their 
exposure. If they develop physical symptoms or behavioral problems, 
doctors or teachers are sometimes too quick to blame the drug 
exposure and miss the real cause, like illness or abuse.

"Society's expectations of the children," she said, "and reaction to 
the mothers are completely guided not by the toxicity, but by the 
social meaning" of the drug.

Research on the health effects of illegal drugs, especially on unborn 
children, is politically loaded. Researchers studying children 
exposed to cocaine say they struggle to interpret their findings for 
the public without exaggerating their significance -- or minimizing it, either.

Dr. Lester, the leader of the Maternal Lifestyle Study, noted that 
the evidence for behavioral problems strengthened as the children in 
his study and others approached adolescence. Researchers in the study 
are collecting data on 14-year-olds, he said, adding: "Absolutely, we 
need to continue to follow these kids. For the M.L.S., the main thing 
we're interested in is whether or not prenatal cocaine exposure 
predisposes you to early-onset drug use in adolescence" or other 
mental health problems.

Researchers have long theorized that prenatal exposure to a drug may 
make it more likely that the child will go on to use it. But so far, 
such a link has been scientifically reported only in the case of 
tobacco exposure.

Teasing out the effects of cocaine exposure is complicated by the 
fact that like Yvette H., almost all of the women in the studies who 
used cocaine while pregnant were also using other substances.

Moreover, most of the children in the studies are poor, and many have 
other risk factors known to affect cognitive development and behavior 
- -- inadequate health care, substandard schools, unstable family 
situations and exposure to high levels of lead. Dr. Lester said his 
group's study was large enough to take such factors into account.

Ms. H., who agreed to be interviewed only on the condition that her 
last name and her children's first names not be used, said she 
entered a drug and alcohol treatment program about six years ago, 
after losing custody of her children.

Another daughter, born after Ms. H. recovered from drug and alcohol 
abuse, is thriving now at 3. Her oldest, a 17-year-old boy, is the 
only one with developmental problems: he is autistic. But Ms. H. said 
she did not use cocaine, alcohol or other substances while pregnant with him.

After 15 months without using drugs or alcohol, Ms. H. regained 
custody and moved into Dayspring House, a residential program in 
Baltimore for women recovering from drug abuse, and their children.

There she received psychological counseling, parenting classes, job 
training and coaching on how to manage her finances. Her youngest 
attended Head Start, the older children went to local schools and 
were assigned household chores, and the family learned how to talk 
about their problems.

Now Ms. H. works at a local grocery, has paid off her debts, has her 
own house and is actively involved in her children's schooling and 
health care. She said regaining her children's trust took a long 
time. "It's something you have to constantly keep working on," she said.

Dr. Belcher, who is president of Dayspring's board of directors, said 
such programs offered evidence-based interventions for the children 
of drug abusers that can help minimize the chances of harm from past 
exposure to cocaine or other drugs.

"I think we can say this is an at-risk group," Dr. Belcher said. "But 
they have great potential to do well if we can mobilize resources 
around the family." 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake