Daily Mail

1 in 3 women admit to binge-drinking during pregnancy

- By Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent

A THIRD of British women risk doing severe harm to their unborn babies by binge drinking during pregnancy, a study has revealed.

Experts called for new guidelines to be drawn up advising women to drink no alcohol at all while pregnant, as it emerged that many are ignoring current advice.

Researcher­s at Cambridge University found that 33 per cent of British women admitted to bingeing – drinking the equivalent of twothirds of a bottle of wine in a single sitting – at least once during their pregnancy.

They also found that the vast majority – 75 per cent – had drunk at least some alcohol at some point while pregnant.

The findings, published in medical journal BMJ Open, add fuel to an escalating row about the confusing advice offered to pregnant women. Experts in recent weeks have fiercely criticised the conflictin­g guidelines issued by Britain’s different health bodies, which say mothers can drink at some points of pregnancy but not others. Instead, doctors say, the advice should be replaced with a single message: do not drink while pregnant.

However, some charities say that many women drink before they know that they are pregnant, and later become unnecessar­ily terrified that they may have harmed their babies.

Health profession­als are neverthele­ss clear that women should not drink more than a couple of drinks at a time at any stage of pregnancy, and certainly should not get drunk.

More than 6,000 babies a year are born in the UK with some form of damage caused by their mother’s drinking. Those who drink heavily are putting their unborn baby at risk of Foetal Alcohol Syndrome, which affects physical and mental developmen­t. The Cambridge team analysed data from 18,000 women in the UK, Ireland, New Zealand and Australia.

They found that 75 per cent of women in Britain had drunk alcohol at some point during pregnancy, compared to 82 per cent in Ireland, 56 per cent in New Zealand and 40 per cent in Australia. Some 33 per cent of British women admitted to bingeing – defined as six units, or three large glasses of wine, at a time – compared to 59 per cent of Irish women, 10 per cent of Australian­s and just 9 per cent of New Zealanders. The researcher­s called for a simplified code in which women are advised not to drink at all while pregnant. ‘Since most women who consume alcohol do so at lower levels where the offspring growth and developmen­t effects are less well understood, the widespread consumptio­n of even low levels of alcohol during pregnancy is a significan­t public health concern,’ they added. Last month, Professor Sir Al Aynsley- Green, president elect of the British Medical Associatio­n, criticised the ‘contradict­ory and inconsiste­nt’ advice given to women, and said: ‘It has to be concluded that there is no “safe” limit for alcohol consumptio­n during pregnancy.’

Currently the Government warns that all pregnant women should avoid alcohol, but says that if they do drink, they should ‘stick to one or two units once or twice a week’.

Meanwhile the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) says that women should abstain from all alcohol in the first three months of pregnancy, after which point there is no evidence that drinking under three units twice a week will do any harm.

Responding to the Cambridge study, Clare Murphy, from the British Pregnancy Advisory Service, called for reassuranc­e for women, adding: ‘The majority of women in the UK are drinking well within the existing recommenda­tions in the second trimester.’

‘Significan­t public health concern’

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