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Article Summary #15: Prenatal care of women who give birth to children with FASD

This Article Summary is part of our CanFASD Connect Top Articles Summary Series. Over the next several months, we will be bringing you summaries of all the recent research papers from our list of the Top FASD Articles of 2019. This is an overview of a recent research paper called Prenatal care of women who gave birth to children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorder in a universal health care system: a case-control study using linked administrative data.

Background:

Almost 10% of women around the world report consuming alcohol during pregnancy. Physicians delivering prenatal health care services to women are in a unique position to help prevent or reduce prenatal alcohol exposure. They are often the first point of care for women of childbearing age and are frequently accessed for preventative health care.

One way to understand how prenatal health professionals may help to reduce prenatal alcohol exposure involves documenting whether or not women who gave birth to children with FASD had access to adequate prenatal health care. Researchers in this study looked at data from a cohort of 702 Manitoban women whose children were born between 1984 and 2012 and were eventually diagnosed with FASD. The researchers then compared access to prenatal care among women whose child has FASD (study group) with women whose child was not diagnosed with FASD (comparison group).

Main findings:
Recommendations:

 

Take-home message:

Adequate prenatal care is an important part of identifying and possibly reducing or eliminating alcohol use during pregnancy. Multidisciplinary interventions that address the barriers to adequate prenatal care for vulnerable women is essential to help reduce the risk of alcohol-exposed pregnancies and support healthy outcomes.

Authors: Deepa Singal, Marni Brownell, Elizabeth Wall-Wieler, Dan Chateau, Ana Hanlon-Dearman, Sally Longstaffe and Leslie L. Roos

Journal: CMAJ Open

Date: February 11, 2019

Read the full article (available open-access)

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