'Crack babies' do better when placed with non-family caregivers
Main Category: Caregivers / HomecareArticle Date: 16 Jul 2004 - 22:00 PDT
''Crack babies' do better when placed with non-family caregivers'
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Ever since the epidemic of cocaine and crack use that began in the 1980s, researchers and doctors have been concerned about the development of children born to women who used cocaine during their pregnancy.
Initially, research focused on the potential negative impacts of the drug itself, treating other factors associated with maternal drug use as interfering. However, as researchers accumulated more information, many concluded that focusing on the direct effect of the drug didn't provide a complete picture. In fact, in a letter to the editor of The New York Times on Nov. 28, 2003, 28 leading researchers in the field questioned whether the widely reported "crack baby" syndrome even exists.
In contrast to the lack of evidence regarding the toxic nature of cocaine itself on the developing fetus, the negative effect of cocaine use on the quality of care parents provide to their young children has been consistently documented. Thus, we studied how the type of care provided to toddlers who experienced prenatal cocaine exposure affected their development.
We followed 83 cocaine-exposed and 63 non-exposed children and their caregivers from birth until the children turned 2. By that age, 49 of the cocaine-exposed children remained with their parents while 34 were cared for by other adults. About half of the 34 children in non-parental care were cared for by relatives (kin care) and the rest by unrelated individuals.
We found that prenatal drug exposure was not directly related to the children's developmental outcome at age 2. However, we found that children in non-parental care, especially those in the care of people who were not relatives, had better environments than those cared for by their parents and performed better in several developmental areas.
This improved performance existed despite the fact that these children experienced more problems at birth than the children who remained with their mothers, including prematurity, and were born to mothers who were heavier cocaine users.
These results suggest that many of the negative outcomes observed in children of cocaine users may result from the quality of caregiving during infancy rather than from the direct effects of the drug in utero.
If the environment is, in fact, more important in determining child developmental outcomes than prenatal cocaine exposure, then developmental problems could be prevented and treated more easily. For instance, support could be provided either through direct intervention with children, by supporting women in their recovery from substance abuse, and/or in helping mothers improve their parenting skills. Finally, our study suggests that "kin" caregivers of cocaine-exposed infants and toddlers may also need support and help with parenting.
Summarized from Child Development, Vol. 75, Issue 4, Prenatal Cocaine Exposure: A Comparison of Two-Year-Old Children in Parental and Non-Parental Care by J.V. Brown, R. Bakeman, Georgia State University; C.D. Coles, K.A. Platzman, and M. Lynch, Emory University School of Medicine. Copyright 2004 The Society for Research in Child Development, Inc. All rights reserved.
*Please contact Karen Melnyk at SRCD (see above) for author availability and contact information.
Contact: Karen Melnyk
kmelnyk@apa.org
202-336-5926
Society for Research in Child Development
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MLA
22 May. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/10840.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/10840.php.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)
stupidity
posted by dave carman on 21 Nov 2005 at 4:22 amIf cigarettes and alchohol have been proven to adversely effect the health of a newborn baby, why isn't it also a fact that drugs, like crack effect these children as well.
We are foster parents, and we see this proof walk into our home in these children, these children who sit there and cry for no apparent reason, these children whom we have held all night long, just to get them to sleep.
By the way, crack and other drugs in it's catagory are way stronger than the cigarettes and alcohol.
A little common sense would go a long way. They all go into the mothers blood stream and then into the baby.
"crack babies"
posted by carol snow on 5 Aug 2004 at 6:03 pmYes, there are crack babies.
I have a child that even as the mother went into labor (full term), she took 3 hits of crack.
Boy is this little girl messed up.
I have devoted 6 years of my life trying to find someone who can help me with this child and she is the "crack baby" no one wants to admit to.
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