Cocaine Use During Pregnancy: Prevalence and Correlates

Autor: Deborah A. Frank, Barry S. Zuckerman, Hortensia Amaro, Kwabena Aboagye, Howard Bauchner, Howard Cabral, Lise Fried, Ralph Hingson, Herbert Kayne, Suzette M. Levenson, Steven Parker, Hilary Reece, Robert Vinci
Rok vydání: 1988
Předmět:
Zdroj: Pediatrics. 82:888-895
ISSN: 1098-4275
0031-4005
DOI: 10.1542/peds.82.6.888
Popis: Cocaine use during pregnancy was assessed by interviews and urine assays obtained prenatally and immediately postpartum from 679 urban women enrolled in prenatal care. Of these, 17% were found to have used cocaine at least once during pregnancy. Eight percent had urine assays positive for cocaine metabolites using the enzyme-mediated immunoassay technique with a cutoff of 300 ng/mL of benzoylecgonine. Of the cocaine users, 24% denied use at the time of the interview and were identified solely by urine assay. Cocaine users were significantly (P < .01) less likely than nonusers to be married, Hispanic, or black born outside of the United States and were less well nourished. Users reported significantly (P < .01) more sexually transmitted diseases, prior low birth weight infants, spontaneous and elective abortions, and greater use of alcohol, cigarettes, marijuana, opiates, and other illicit drugs during pregnancy. Because cocaine use is correlated with many potential risk factors, large sample sizes and multivariate statistical techniques are needed to determine whether cocaine use during pregnancy poses an independent risk for adverse neonatal outcomes.
Databáze: OpenAIRE