Edmonton Journal

Curb drinking while pregnant

Don’t put your unborn child at unnecessar­y risk

- Mehmet Oz, M. D. is host of The Dr. Oz Show, and Mike Roizen, M. D. is Chief Wellness Officer and Chair of Wellness Institute at Cleveland Clinic. Email your health and wellness questions to Dr. Oz and Dr. Roizen at youdocsdai­ly@sharecare.com. For Postmed

Q: My sister is having her first child and still has the occasional glass of wine with dinner. She claims that there’s no risk if she’s moderate, but it worries me. What’s the bottom line here? A:

There’s been contradict­ory info on drinking and pregnancy lately. For years, the recommenda­tion was no drinking at all. Then last year, because of a study with dubious conclusion­s, folks were saying moderate consumptio­n was OK. But that study’s rationaliz­ation (we kid you not) was: Since some moms who drank a lot didn’t have kids with neurodevel­opmental problems and some moms who didn’t drink had kids with problems, then it must be OK to have three to seven drinks a week. Huh?

So here are the important facts about fetal alcohol spectrum disorders: 1. In a recent study of 2,000 Grade 1 students, researcher­s found that fetal alcohol syndrome — the most severe condition on the spectrum — affected six to nine kids out of every 1,000. Partial fetal alcohol syndrome was diagnosed in 11 to 17 kids out of every 1,000. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s numbers for fetal alcohol syndrome range from 0.2 per cent to two per cent of U.S. children. They do not have statistics for fetal alcohol spectrum disorders. 2. The CDC says 7.6 per cent of pregnant women admit they had a drink in the past 30 days. 3. The risk of harm to the fetus is also influenced by the amount of alcohol a woman drank in the three months before she got pregnant, late recognitio­n that she is pregnant (so that she doesn’t stop drinking immediatel­y) and how much the father drinks. 4. Fetal alcohol spectrum disorders can cause small head size and facial deformitie­s, short stature, hyperactiv­ity, poor co-ordination, poor memory, learning disabiliti­es, speech and language delays, low IQ, and vision, hearing, heart, kidney and bone problems. 5. The alcohol a mother drinks always passes through the umbilical cord directly to the fetus. The brain of a fetus is quite vulnerable to the neurotoxic effects of alcohol.

So show her this column, let her know that if she drinks she’s putting her unborn child at risk and let her know your concern comes from love for her and excitement about being an uncle.

 ?? DR. MEHMET OZ AND DR. MICHAEL ROIZEN ??
DR. MEHMET OZ AND DR. MICHAEL ROIZEN

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