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Persons using assistive technology might not be able to fully access information in this file. For assistance, please send e-mail to: mmwrq@cdc.gov. Type 508 Accommodation and the title of the report in the subject line of e-mail. Sociodemographic and Behavioral Characteristics Associated with Alcohol Consumption During Pregnancy -- United States, 1988Identification of women at risk for consuming alcohol during pregnancy is critical to the design of interventions for reducing the adverse effects of alcohol on both women and their children. This report uses data from the 1988 National Maternal and Infant Health Survey (NMIHS) -- the most recent vital records survey for which a population-based sample of this size was available -- conducted by CDC's National Center for Health Statistics to analyze characteristics of women who drink alcohol during pregnancy. The NMIHS was a mail survey of a stratified systematic sample of 13,417 women who had a live-born infant during 1988 (1); data from the survey became available in 1991. A total of 9953 (74%) responded. Maternal characteristics analyzed included age, race/ethnicity, education, household income, marital status, parity, smoking status, prenatal care, and alcohol drinking patterns during the 3 months before respondents learned of their pregnancy and during their pregnancy (i.e., prenatal drinkers) *. Data were further analyzed for women who reported having had six or more drinks per week during their pregnancy (i.e., frequent drinkers). The sample data were weighted to reflect general population estimates, and standard errors were calculated using SUDAAN (2). Overall, 45.4% of the respondents reported drinking alcohol during the 3 months before they learned of their pregnancy, 20.7% reported drinking alcohol after they learned of their pregnancy, 16.8% reported drinking three or fewer drinks per month during pregnancy, and 0.6% reported having had six or more drinks per week during pregnancy. The likelihood of any reported prenatal drinking increased directly with age through age group 30-34 years Table_1. The race/ethnicity-specific proportion of prenatal drinkers was highest among white, non-Hispanic women (25.4% {95% confidence interval (CI)=23.9%-27.0%}). The likelihood of prenatal drinking was higher among women with greater than or equal to 16 years of education (30.8% {95% CI=28.3%-33.2%}) than among women in other educational groups and higher among women with annual household incomes of greater than or equal to $40,000 (29.1% {95% CI=26.5%-31.7%}) compared with women in other income groups. Prenatal drinking was reported by 38.2% (95% CI=33.5%-42.9%) of women who smoked greater than 10 cigarettes a day and by 17.2% (95% CI=16.0%-18.4%) of women who were nonsmokers. Frequent prenatal drinking was more prevalent among women aged greater than or equal to 35 years (1.4% {95% CI=0.2%-2.5%}) than among younger women Table_1. The race/ethnicity-specific proportion of frequent drinkers was higher among all racial/ethnic groups other than white. The likelihood of frequent drinking was higher among women with annual household incomes less than or equal to $10,000 (1.3% {95% CI=0.7%-1.9%}). The proportion of frequent drinkers increased as smoking level increased, and was more than three times higher among women receiving no prenatal care than among those who received prenatal care (2.2% {95% CI=0.9%-3.6%} compared with 0.6% {95% CI=0.4%- 0.8%}). Reported by: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Prevention Section, Developmental Disabilities Br, Div of Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities, National Center for Environmental Health; Followback Survey Br, Div of Vital Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics, CDC. Editorial NoteEditorial Note: An advisory both for women who are pregnant and for those trying to become pregnant not to drink alcohol was issued by the U.S. Surgeon General in 1981 (3) and was reiterated in 1990 by the Secretary of Health and Human Services (4). Although only a small proportion of the population surveyed reported frequent drinking during pregnancy, analyses of risk factors suggest these women have some different sociodemographic characteristics than those of all women who drink during pregnancy; however, the number of frequent drinkers in the survey was small, producing unstable population estimates that require further evaluation. The findings in this report are consistent with selected findings in previous studies (5,6) and can assist in targeting programs for the prevention of maternal alcohol consumption during pregnancy. The findings in this report are subject to at least three limitations. First, alcohol drinking was self-reported and could not be verified. Disclosure of prenatal alcohol consumption may have been underreported because of increasing awareness of the dangers of alcohol consumption during pregnancy (7). Second, NMIHS data do not include a question about "binge" drinking (i.e., consuming five or more drinks on any one occasion), which has been associated with neurodevelopmental deficits (8). Third, drinking patterns may have changed since these data were collected. Analyses of more recent data from CDC's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System may provide information about recent trends in maternal alcohol consumption during pregnancy. The high prevalence of alcohol drinking by women during pregnancy in 1988 (21%) underscores the need to sustain efforts by public health agencies and health-care providers to advise women against drinking if they are trying to become pregnant or are likely to become pregnant. Although in this study frequent alcohol drinkers were a small proportion of all women who consumed alcohol during pregnancy, they are at greater risk than infrequent drinkers for delivering infants with alcohol-related disorders (9,10). Although previous studies documented adverse fetal effects of prenatal alcohol at relatively high thresholds, more recent studies have found adverse physical and neurobehavioral effects at lower exposure levels. Population-based surveys that oversample women with characteristics described in this and other studies may assist in better defining women who drink alcohol frequently during pregnancy because they may account for a disproportionately larger number of children affected by in utero alcohol exposure. References
* Women who responded yes to "Did you drink any alcoholic beverages during the 12 months before your delivery?" were asked "How many drinks did you have on average during the 3 months before you found out you were pregnant?" and "How many drinks did you have on average after you found out you were pregnant?" One drink was defined as 12 oz of beer, 4 oz of wine, or 1 1/2 oz of liquor. Table_1 Note: To print large tables and graphs users may have to change their printer settings to landscape and use a small font size. TABLE 1. Percentage of women who self-reported drinking alcohol during pregnancy, by selected characteristics -- National Maternal and Infant Health Survey, United States, 1988 ======================================================================================================== Prenatal * drinkers (n=1738) Frequent + drinkers (n=102) ---------------------------- ---------------------------- Characteristic % (95% CI &) % (95% CI%) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Age group (yrs) <=19 9.5 ( 7.2%-11.9%) 0.2 (0.1%-0.3%) 20-24 16.7 (14.6%-18.7%) 0.7 (0.3%-1.2%) 25-29 22.9 (20.8%-25.0%) 0.4 (0.1%-0.6%) 30-34 28.7 (25.9%-31.5%) 0.6 (0.2%-1.1%) >=35 21.9 (17.8%-26.0%) 1.4 (0.2%-2.5%) Race/Ethnicity White, non-Hispanic 25.4 (23.9%-27.0%) 0.5 (0.2%-0.7%) White, Hispanic 10.6 ( 7.9%-13.3%) 0.3 (0 -0.6%) Black, non-Hispanic 12.2 (11.2%-13.1%) 1.1 (0.8%-1.5%) Black, Hispanic 8.2 ( 3.5%-12.9%) 1.1 (0 -2.8%) Other @ 10.0 ( 6.0%-13.9%) 1.1 (0 -2.5%) Education (yrs) 0-11 10.5 ( 8.7%-12.3%) 0.7 (0.3%-1.1%) 12 18.7 (17.0%-20.4%) 0.6 (0.3%-0.9%) 13-15 24.8 (22.3%-27.3%) 0.3 (0 -0.7%) >=16 30.8 (28.3%-33.2%) 0.6 (0 -1.2%) Total annual household income <$10,000 17.1 (15.0%-19.2%) 1.3 (0.7%-1.9%) $10,000-$24,999 15.8 (14.0%-17.7%) 0.4 (0.1%-0.7%) $25,000-$39,999 21.9 (19.5%-24.4%) 0.3 (0 -0.5%) >=$40,000 29.1 (26.5%-31.7%) 0.4 (0.1%-0.7%) Marital status Married 22.1 (20.7%-23.5%) 0.4 (0.2%-0.6%) Unmarried 16.7 (14.8%-18.7%) 1.0 (0.5%-1.5%) Parity 1 20.5 (18.8%-22.1%) 0.4 (0.1%-0.6%) 2 20.5 (18.5%-22.6%) 0.5 (0.2%-0.8%) >=3 21.9 (19.5%-24.2%) 1.1 (0.6%-1.7%) Cigarette smoking status during pregnancy 0 17.2 (16.0%-18.4%) 0.2 (0.1%-0.4%) 1-10 per day 30.0 (26.6%-33.4%) 1.2 (0.6%-1.9%) >10 per day 38.2 (33.5%-42.9%) 2.7 (1.3%-4.1%) Prenatal care Yes 20.7 (19.6%-21.9%) 0.6 (0.4%-0.8%) No 20.6 (13.1%-28.2%) 2.2 (0.9%-3.6%) Total 20.7 (19.6%-21.9%) 0.6 (0.4%-0.8%) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Women who reported drinking at any time during pregnancy. + Women who reported consuming six or more drinks per week during pregnancy. One drink was defined as 12 oz of beer, 4 oz of wine or 1 1/2 oz of liquor. & Confidence interval. @ Number of women in other specific racial/ethnic groups was too small for meaningful analysis. ======================================================================================================== Return to top. Disclaimer All MMWR HTML versions of articles are electronic conversions from ASCII text into HTML. This conversion may have resulted in character translation or format errors in the HTML version. Users should not rely on this HTML document, but are referred to the electronic PDF version and/or the original MMWR paper copy for the official text, figures, and tables. An original paper copy of this issue can be obtained from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO), Washington, DC 20402-9371; telephone: (202) 512-1800. Contact GPO for current prices. **Questions or messages regarding errors in formatting should be addressed to mmwrq@cdc.gov.Page converted: 09/19/98 |
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