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Alcohol-use disorders during and within one year of pregnancy: A population-based cohort study 1985-2006

Given the severe risks to the fetus from heavy prenatal alcohol exposure, assessment and recording of alcohol use should be routinely undertaken in maternity...

Authors:
O'Leary CM, Halliday J, Bartu A, D'Antoine H, Bower C

Authors notes:
BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology. 2013;120(6):744-753

Keywords:
Aboriginal, alcohol and pregnancy, alcohol-use disorders, data linkage cohort, epidemiology, fetal alcohol syndrome

Abstract:
To examine alcohol-use disorders in pregnant women and the extent of under-reporting.

The proportion of Aboriginal mothers in Western Australia with an alcohol diagnosis (23.1%) is ten times greater than for non-Aboriginal mothers (2.3%).

There has been a six-fold increase in the percentage of non-Aboriginal births with a maternal alcohol diagnosis recorded during pregnancy and a 100-fold increase for Aboriginal births.

Around 70% of the mothers of children diagnosed with FAS did not have an alcohol diagnosis recorded during pregnancy and 18% of the mothers had no record of an alcohol diagnosis.

Maternal alcohol exposure during pregnancy is significantly under-ascertained.

Given the severe risks to the fetus from heavy prenatal alcohol exposure, assessment and recording of alcohol use should be routinely undertaken in maternity and other health settings.