Donaldson Tom, Dang Elizabeth P, Pierce-Bulger Marilyn, Mitchell Kathleen T, Kachor Andy R, Arvizu Rosa
FASD United, Washington, DC, USA.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Subst Use Addctn J. 2025 Apr;46(2):413-420. doi: 10.1177/29767342241300797. Epub 2024 Nov 28.
The consumption of alcohol and other substances during pregnancy can impair prenatal development. While scientifically informed public health measures have raised awareness of the risks of harmful prenatal substance exposures, the use of alcohol and other substances during pregnancy continues to rise. The successful dissemination of consistent messaging, health care professional education and training, and universal implementation of clinical interventions may help reduce drinking in pregnancy and prevent fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs), a constellation of developmental disabilities and birth defects caused by alcohol use during pregnancy. Alcohol screening and brief intervention (alcohol SBI) is an evidence-based preventive practice that enables early identification of excessive drinking and intervention prior to serious consequences. Routine clinical implementation of alcohol SBI has been shown to effectively reduce excessive alcohol consumption among adults, including pregnant people. Many barriers prevent widespread implementation of the practice: a lack of health care professional knowledge of the prevalence and implications of prenatal alcohol exposure, stigma surrounding individuals who use substances potentially harmful to their pregnancy, resistance to public health messages encouraging alcohol avoidance during pregnancy, and discomfort and hesitancy with alcohol SBI procedures among practitioners. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) leads the public health effort to prevent alcohol use during pregnancy and improve identification of and care for children living with FASDs. CDC partners with health systems, health care professional associations, universities, and community-based networks to promote alcohol SBI as an effective but underused preventive health service. This special section consisting of 6 articles including this introductory commentary represents the efforts of 11 CDC projects and their partners to demonstrate the rationale for FASD prevention and intervention, engage health care disciplines to expand prevention messaging and education for providers, develop practical approaches for implementing alcohol SBI in diverse clinical settings, and prevent alcohol use in pregnancy and FASDs.
孕期饮酒及使用其他物质会损害胎儿发育。尽管基于科学的公共卫生措施提高了人们对有害的孕期物质暴露风险的认识,但孕期饮酒及使用其他物质的情况仍在增加。持续传播一致的信息、对医护人员进行教育和培训以及普遍实施临床干预,可能有助于减少孕期饮酒并预防胎儿酒精谱系障碍(FASDs),这是一组由孕期饮酒导致的发育障碍和出生缺陷。酒精筛查与简短干预(酒精SBI)是一种基于证据的预防措施,能够早期识别过度饮酒情况并在产生严重后果之前进行干预。酒精SBI的常规临床实施已被证明能有效减少成年人(包括孕妇)的过度饮酒。许多障碍阻碍了该措施的广泛实施:医护人员缺乏关于孕期酒精暴露的患病率及影响的知识;对孕期使用可能有害物质的人存在污名化现象;对鼓励孕期避免饮酒的公共卫生信息存在抵触情绪;从业者对酒精SBI程序感到不适和犹豫。疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)牵头开展公共卫生工作,以预防孕期饮酒,并改善对患有FASDs儿童的识别与护理。CDC与卫生系统、医护人员协会、大学及社区网络合作,推广酒精SBI,将其作为一种有效但未得到充分利用的预防性健康服务。这个特别版块由6篇文章(包括这篇引言性评论)组成,代表了11个CDC项目及其合作伙伴为证明FASD预防与干预的基本原理、促使医护学科扩大对提供者的预防信息传播与教育、制定在不同临床环境中实施酒精SBI的实用方法以及预防孕期饮酒和FASDs所做出的努力。