CHARLESTON, W.Va. - More than 800 West Virginia women reported they abused drugs while pregnant during the past year, according to a study released Thursday.
About 100 babies born to those drug-using mothers had to be rushed to newborn intensive care units at hospitals, where they received specialized medical care that cost an estimated $4.3 million.
The government bore the bulk of those costs. Medicaid covered 83 percent of pregnant drug users in West Virginia last year, according to the report from the West Virginia Perinatal Partnership.
"We're seeing tremendous increases in women using drugs during pregnancy in recent years," said Denise Burgess, who directs the Family Resource Center at CAMC Women and Children's Hospital.
To make matters worse, 78 percent of mothers who used drugs acknowledged they also smoked during pregnancy - a practice that further jeopardizes a baby's health, the study found.
"The fetus gets a double hit," said Dr. Martha Mullett, a pediatrician at West Virginia University's School of Medicine.
The report analyzed data from questionnaires that women filled out after they give birth during a yearlong period that ended last July. It's the first time that the "birth score" survey included questions about drug use.
The 800 women who reported using drugs make up 5 percent of all women who had babies during the past fiscal year. But the number of drug-addicted mothers is probably much higher, doctors and health advocates said Thursday.
Many pregnant women are reluctant to admit they used drugs while pregnant, fearing they might be arrested and prosecuted, Mullet said.
"Asking somebody whether they used drugs isn't perfection," Mullet said. "Sometimes they won't tell you, but it's the best we can get."
Nearly 60 percent of drug-abusing mothers said they smoked marijuana during pregnancy, the data showed. About 17 percent reported they used methadone, while 13 percent said they used cocaine and 3.5 percent methamphetamine.
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In fact, marijuana can relieve the severe nausea that many women experience. The suffering my partner endured and for which she was hospitalized for was greatly reduced with marijuana.
Aside from this flawed study, the real issue is in treating addiction as a crime instead of a disease. The truly addicted mothers - not the marijuana smokers - obviously need medical help. Sadly, tax dollars are being spent to spread misinformation about marijuana while people suffer.
http://www.mothering.com/articles/pregnancy_birth/birth_preparation/marijuana-side4.html