USA TODAY International Edition
PRENATAL SMOKING STRIKES AGAIN
This time, it’s linked to hearing loss in adolescents
Parents can add hearing loss to the list of things tobacco smoke can do to children.
Prenatal smoking has long been linked to harm in children of all ages, including premature birth, low weight or underdevelopment, and asthma. Now, a connection also has been made between smoking while pregnant and hearing loss in adolescents, according to a study in the journal JAMA Otolaryngology.
“Cigarette smoking is probably the worst man- made epidemic,” says Michael Weitzman, study author and a professor at the New York University School of Medicine.
In a group of 964 children ages 12 to 15 from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey in 2005- 2006, about 16% of parents confirmed prenatal smoke exposure. In most cases, kids with exposure were roughly three times more likely to have mild hearing loss. Kids without exposure were found to hear better by 3 decibels compared with those who were exposed.
“Most of the mothers in this particular sample quit ( smoking) in the first trimester,” says Anil Lalwani, a study contributor and professor and vice chairman for research at Columbia University. “Even brief encounters ( with tobacco smoke) have negative effects.”
The study was unable to determine how exactly the damage is caused while the child is in the womb or exactly what the long- term effects may be. But it did report that hearing loss could lead to another list of problems for young people, including cognitive and behavioral problems, poor development of social skills, or even other problems down the road such as a lower IQ and dropping out of school.
Weitzman also pointed out that other factors such as loud concerts or blaring headphones may have an influence on hearing loss in adolescents. But researchers accounted for those differences in the comparisons, and their study still showed an association between prenatal smoking and hearing loss, he says.