The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Drinking alcohol when you’re pregnant: an inconvenie­nt truth

- By Jen Gunter Dr. Jen Gunter is an obstetrici­an and gynecologi­st practicing in California.

Pregnant women are given a long list of medical recommenda­tions that can come across as patriarcha­l don’ts: Don’t eat raw fish. Don’t consume deli meats. Don’t do hot yoga! Don’t drink.

There’s scientific evidence that these activities can have negative impacts on the health of the fetus, but the one that seems to be the source of most debate is alcohol.

After all, the French do it, don’t they?

And many people born in the 1960s or earlier had mothers who drank. And we’re fine, right?

So my opinion, especially as someone who believes strongly in a woman’s right to make decisions about her own body, may come as a surprise: It’s medically best not to drink alcohol in pregnancy. Not even a little. The source of that viewpoint? My training and practice as an OB/GYN.

Some attribute this abstinence approach to the patriarchy: Clearly we doctors know that moderate alcohol is safe (we don’t!), and we just don’t trust women with that knowledge.

Some also say that, in an effort to avoid frivolous lawsuits, doctors advise against alcohol while using a nudgenudge-wink-wink to insinuate that a glass or two is fine.

But this isn’t about sexism (not this time) or dodging litigation. This is about facts. How women use those facts is, of course, their choice.

The truth is that fetal alcohol syndrome is far more common than people think, and we have no ability to say accurately what level of alcohol consumptio­n is risk free.

There was a time when doctors recommende­d alcohol to pregnant women for relaxation and pain relief, or even prescribed it intravenou­sly as a tocolytic — meaning it stopped premature labor.

Things began to change in 1973, when fetal alcohol syndrome, or FAS, was formally recognized after a seminal article was published in The Lancet, a medical journal. FAS is a constellat­ion of findings that includes changes in growth, distinctiv­e facial features and a negative impact on the developing brain. We now know that alcohol is a teratogen, meaning it can cause birth defects.

With that knowledge, the pendulum swung hard. In 1988, Congress passed the Alcoholic Beverage Labeling Act, which would add the well-known “women should not drink alcoholic beverages during pregnancy because of the risk of birth defects” label to alcoholic beverages for sale or distributi­on in the United States.

Then, over the past 10 years, women have become more vocal — and rightly so — about patriarcha­l messaging in medicine. Was no-drinking-whilepregn­ant just one more way to speak down to us and control our bodies?

No. But I can understand the confusion.

Part of the issue is that the science on alcohol and pregnancy is tricky: Giving pregnant women alcohol for medical testing is not likely to be accepted by ethics committees.

And what about all those pregnant Frenchwome­n who drink ? It turns out they aren’t, really. One study in Europe that surveyed pregnant women and new mothers during two months showed that only 11.5 percent of women reported consuming alcohol once they knew they were pregnant. Of these women, most (72 percent) had a single 5-ounce glass of wine or less the entire pregnancy.

We now have new data in the United States telling us that rates of FAS are higher than we knew. In 2018, a paper on FAS was published in the medical journal JAMA. Researcher­s trained in identifyin­g the distinctiv­e physical characteri­stics of FAS evaluated more than 3,000 children in four communitie­s across the United States.

The findings were staggering. The way we are consuming alcohol in pregnancy is resulting in a conservati­ve estimate of 1.1 to 5 percent of children — up to 1 in 20 — with FAS. According to the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts, fetal alcohol spectrum disorders are more prevalent than autism.

And yet at least 10 percent of pregnant women still drink during pregnancy.

The best analogy for the risk associated with alcohol consumptio­n in pregnancy is driving with your newborn unbuckled in the back seat. Maybe you’ll get into a car accident and maybe you won’t. And if you do, maybe it will be a fender bender or maybe it will be catastroph­ic.

While the chances of getting in a car accident while driving home from the hospital with your newborn are very small, most parents will recall how much they stressed over installing the car seat correctly.

And yet, even with such limited risk, I doubt a single pediatrici­an would say: “Sure, drive unbuckled just this once. It’s a celebratio­n.”

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