Ethen Mary K, Ramadhani Tunu A, Scheuerle Angela E, Canfield Mark A, Wyszynski Diego F, Druschel Charlotte M, Romitti Paul A
Texas Department of State Health Services, Birth Defects Epidemiology and Surveillance Branch, Austin, TX 78756, USA.
Matern Child Health J. 2009 Mar;13(2):274-85. doi: 10.1007/s10995-008-0328-2. Epub 2008 Mar 4.
To determine the prevalence, patterns, and predictors of alcohol consumption prior to and during various intervals of pregnancy in the U.S.
Alcohol-related, pregnancy-related, and demographic data were derived from computer-assisted telephone interviews with 4,088 randomly selected control mothers from the National Birth Defects Prevention Study who delivered live born infants without birth defects during 1997-2002. Alcohol consumption rates and crude and adjusted odds ratios (OR) were calculated.
30.3% of all women reported drinking alcohol at some time during pregnancy, of which 8.3% reported binge drinking (4+ drinks on one occasion). Drinking rates declined considerably after the first month of pregnancy, during which 22.5% of women reported drinking, although 2.7% of women reported drinking during all trimesters of pregnancy and 7.9% reported drinking during the 3rd trimester. Pre-pregnancy binge drinking was a strong predictor of both drinking during pregnancy (adjusted OR = 8.52, 95% CI = 6.67-10.88) and binge drinking during pregnancy (adjusted OR = 36.02, 95% CI = 24.63-52.69). Other characteristics associated with both any drinking and binge drinking during pregnancy were non-Hispanic white race/ethnicity, cigarette smoking during pregnancy, and having an unintended pregnancy.
Our study revealed that drinking during pregnancy is fairly common, three times the levels reported in surveys that ask only about drinking during the month before the survey. Women who binge drink before pregnancy are at particular risk for drinking after becoming pregnant. Sexually active women of childbearing ages who drink alcohol should be advised to use reliable methods to prevent pregnancy, plan their pregnancies, and stop drinking before becoming pregnant.
确定美国孕期不同阶段之前及期间酒精消费的患病率、模式和预测因素。
酒精相关、妊娠相关和人口统计学数据来自对4088名随机选择的对照母亲进行的计算机辅助电话访谈,这些母亲来自国家出生缺陷预防研究,于1997 - 2002年期间分娩了无出生缺陷的活产婴儿。计算了酒精消费率以及粗比值比和调整后的比值比(OR)。
30.3%的女性报告在孕期的某个时间饮酒,其中8.3%报告有暴饮行为(一次饮用4杯及以上)。怀孕第一个月后饮酒率大幅下降,在此期间22.5%的女性报告饮酒,尽管2.7%的女性报告在孕期所有阶段都饮酒,7.9%的女性报告在孕晚期饮酒。孕前暴饮是孕期饮酒(调整后的OR = 8.52,95%可信区间 = 6.67 - 10.88)和孕期暴饮(调整后的OR = 36.02,95%可信区间 = 24.63 - 52.69)的有力预测因素。与孕期任何饮酒和暴饮相关的其他特征包括非西班牙裔白人种族/族裔、孕期吸烟以及意外怀孕。
我们的研究表明孕期饮酒相当普遍,是仅询问调查前一个月饮酒情况的调查所报告水平的三倍。孕前暴饮的女性在怀孕后饮酒的风险尤其高。应建议有性行为的育龄饮酒女性采用可靠方法预防怀孕、计划怀孕,并在怀孕前戒酒。