The Great Tragedy of a Damaged Brain at Birth
23 Mar 2019
The Charter of Rights and Freedoms says that all Canadians receive justice. The U.S. Constitution states that “All men are created Equal”. But some children are born who do not receive justice. Nor will they ever be equal. It’s because they have damaged brains at birth, due to mothers who drink alcohol during pregnancy.
Recently, in Canada, there was an outpouring of public anger when police removed a newborn baby from her indigenous mother. I have no knowledge of whether this action was justified. Authorities claim that the woman was drunk when admitted to hospital. Others deny this.
But regardless of who is right or wrong, there are startling facts about Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Disease (FASD) that may make your hair stand on end.
Public Health Agencies say that in Canada alone, there are 300,000 children currently living with this disability. And reports say that between one and nine in a thousand babies are born with this devastating neurological condition.
Why such tragedy? Because once a baby’s brain is damaged by alcohol no treatment can restore it to normal. It means an FASD child faces a lifetime of inequality because of a mother who knows the risks of alcohol during pregnancy but refuses to stop drinking. Or, sometimes, due to those who are unaware of this danger.
There is still some ignorance about drinking alcohol during pregnancy. For instance, The National Organization on FASD reports that one in five women drink during pregnancy. In addition, 15 percent of women of child-bearing age don’t realize the danger of alcohol during pregnancy. And I find it amazing that in 2019 40 percent of women of child-bearing age do not use contraception!
There’s another troubling problem. Women who become pregnant may not know they are pregnant for several weeks, sometimes months. In the meantime they may be injuring their child’s brain by imbibing.
We know that FASD occurs in one-third to one half of infants whose mothers consumed six or more alcoholic drinks daily during pregnancy. A Harvard study showed the risk decreases to 10 percent with three drinks daily.
Pregnant mothers often fail to realize that when they drink alcohol the fetus also consumes it. But what is pleasurable to the mother can be catastrophic to an unborn fetus. Pregnant women have a mature functioning liver that detoxifies alcohol in the blood. A developing fetus does not have this metabolic safeguard. This means alcohol crosses the blood-brain barrier and subjects the brain to high levels of alcohol for a longer time. It spells disaster for the developing brain.
Studies show that about 60 percent of these children, burdened by a host of neurological mental problems, end up in prison or a mental health facility. And the lifetime cost of one of these children has been estimated as high as one million dollars.
So how can we stop alcohol from being the leading source of preventable birth defects? Education is the ultimate answer, yet getting this message across is easier said than done. After all, Ireland is not a third world country, but the Irish pub may be responsible for Ireland being listed as one of five countries in the world with a high incidence of FASD children.
Perhaps a primary message to women would be to use birth control until they are ready to have a baby. In addition, they must abstain from alcohol while trying to become pregnant. And once pregnant, to say “no” to alcohol altogether, as no one knows the safe amount.
Destroying your own life by alcohol is one matter. But doing so to an unborn child is madness. One such tragedy is a recent report of a FASD mother who is being overseen by 21 social agencies, three social workers, and who is upset that her seven children are all in foster care.
It’s hard to envision the social chaos in this family, the future for these children and countless others in the same situation. Then add on the huge economic cost to taxpayers.
I’d predict that readers will have comments about this catastrophe. If so, I’ll publish them.