The Stanton Peele
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Why are crack babies so screwed up?Question:
Dear Stanton: I am a student attending ----- and I have chosen a topic in a Sociology class. The topic I am researching is "Crack/Cocaine Babies" and the consequences that this has on society. I am hopeful that the 'Ask Stanton!' page could help me locate specific topic criteria with references to back it up. Addictive women having babies and the social ramifications of the problems crack/cocaine children are causing our society. Tom Stanton's Answer:
Dear Tom: I hope this won't get you in trouble with your sociology class, but the "crack baby" phenomenon was overhype. Basically, women with a wide range of problems, some of whom took cocaine, gave birth to children with a number of problems. Immediately (and predictably) this was blamed on cocaine, and the "crack baby" phenomenon was born. Let me summarize what we know:
Here are some references: Ira J. Chasnoff et al., Cocaine/polydrug use in pregnancy: Two-year follow-up, Pediatrics, 89:284-289, 1992. Claire Coles et al., Effects of cocaine and alcohol use in pregnancy on neonatal growth and nuerobehavioral status, Neurotoxicology and Teratology, 14:23-27, 1992. Gideon Koren et al., Bias against the null hypothesis: The reproductive hazards of cocaine, Lancet, December 16, 1440-1442, 1989. Linda C. Mayes et al., The problem of prenatal cocaine exposure: A rush to judgment, JAMA, 267:406-408, 1992. Barry Zuckerman and Deborah Frank, "Crack kids": Not broken, Pediatrics, 89:337-339, 1992. Update, 20 December, 1999 Researchers led by the chairman of the division of neonatology at the Albert Einstein medical Center in Philadelphia, Dr. Hallam Hurt, found when investigating "crack babies" that, "The findings are overwhelming and persistent there may be a drug effect, but it's totally overshadowed by poverty." The researchers found that poor children tracked to 4.5 years of age performed poorly on cognitive tests compared with other children, whether or not the poor children had been exposed to cocaine parentally. Of course, even if the cocaine babies did slightly worse on the tests, the most harmful effects to children from cocaine-using mothers could be due to the variety of other disadvantages the children experienced. Children of such mothers were more likely to live in poverty, to be victims of abuse and neglect, and to be inadequately nourished and to suffer other health problems. Betancourt, L. et al., Problem-solving ability of inner-city children with and without in utero cocaine exposure, Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, 20:418-424, 1999. © 2000 Stanton Peele. All rights reserved. |
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