Tigka Maria, Metallinou Dimitra, Tzeli Maria, Lykeridou Katerina
Department of Midwifery, School of Health and Care Sciences, University of West Attica, Athens, Greece.
Department of Obstetric Emergency, General and Maternity Hospital 'Helena Venizelou', Athens, Greece.
Tob Induc Dis. 2023 Jun 16;21:80. doi: 10.18332/tid/166109. eCollection 2023.
Low-level knowledge of problematic substance use during the perinatal period may lead to numerous adverse outcomes. We sought to determine maternal tobacco, alcohol and caffeine consumption during the perinatal period during the COVID-19 pandemic.
This prospective cohort study recruited women from five Greek maternity hospitals between January and May 2020. Data were collected with a structured questionnaire initially completed by postpartum women during their hospitalization and re-administered via telephone interview in the first, third and sixth month postpartum.
The study sample consisted of 283 women. Smoking rates decreased during pregnancy (12.4%) compared to the pre-pregnancy period (32.9%, p<0.001) and during lactation (5.6%) compared to the antenatal period (p<0.001). The smoking rate increased again after breastfeeding cessation (16.9%) compared to the rate during lactation (p<0.001), but remained lower than the pre-pregnancy rate (p=0.008). Only 1.4% of the women reported breastfeeding cessation due to smoking, whereas those who smoked more during pregnancy were more likely to cease breastfeeding (OR=1.24; 95% CI: 1.05-1.48, p=0.012). Regarding alcohol consumption, it was significantly lower during pregnancy (5.7%), lactation (5.5%) and after breastfeeding cessation (5.2%) compared to the pre-pregnancy period (21.9%, p<0.001 for all correlations). Women who consumed alcohol during lactation were less likely to wean (OR=0.21; 95% CI: 0.05-0.83, p=0.027). Caffeine intake decreased during pregnancy compared to preconception period (p<0.001), while in lactating women it remained at low rates until the 3rd month of follow-up. Caffeine consumption at one month postpartum (β=0.09; SE=0.04, p=0.045) was positively associated with longer duration of breastfeeding.
Tobacco, alcohol and caffeine consumption decreased in the perinatal period compared to the preconception period. The pandemic may have contributed to the downtrend in smoking and alcohol consumption due to COVID-related restrictions and fear of potential illness. Nevertheless, smoking was associated with reduced duration of breastfeeding and breastfeeding cessation.
围产期对问题物质使用的了解不足可能会导致众多不良后果。我们试图确定2019冠状病毒病大流行期间围产期孕妇的烟草、酒精和咖啡因消费量。
这项前瞻性队列研究于2020年1月至5月从希腊五家妇产医院招募女性。数据通过结构化问卷收集,最初由产后女性在住院期间完成,并在产后第一个月、第三个月和第六个月通过电话访谈重新进行。
研究样本包括283名女性。与怀孕前(32.9%,p<0.001)相比,孕期吸烟率下降(12.4%);与产前(p<0.001)相比,哺乳期吸烟率下降(5.6%)。与哺乳期吸烟率(p<0.001)相比,停止母乳喂养后吸烟率再次上升(16.9%),但仍低于怀孕前水平(p=0.008)。只有1.4%的女性报告因吸烟而停止母乳喂养,而孕期吸烟较多的女性更有可能停止母乳喂养(OR=1.24;95%CI:1.05-1.48,p=0.012)。关于酒精消费,与怀孕前相比,孕期(5.7%)、哺乳期(5.5%)和停止母乳喂养后(5.2%)的酒精消费量显著降低(所有相关性p<0.001)。哺乳期饮酒女性断奶的可能性较小(OR=0.21;95%CI:0.05-0.83,p=0.027)。与怀孕前相比,孕期咖啡因摄入量下降(p<0.001),而哺乳期女性在随访的第三个月之前咖啡因摄入量一直较低。产后一个月的咖啡因消费量(β=0.09;SE=0.04,p=0.045)与母乳喂养时间延长呈正相关。
与怀孕前相比,围产期烟草、酒精和咖啡因的消费量有所下降。大流行可能由于与新冠相关的限制措施以及对潜在疾病的恐惧,导致吸烟和酒精消费呈下降趋势。然而,吸烟与母乳喂养时间缩短和停止母乳喂养有关。