Dicker M, Leighton E A
Washington Consulting Group, Washington, DC.
Am J Public Health. 1994 Sep;84(9):1433-8. doi: 10.2105/ajph.84.9.1433.
There has been a lack of reliable national data on the number of pregnant women using drugs and the number of newborns affected by such use. The major reasons for this lack have been inadequate sampling and data collection procedures and the lack of a risk assessment perspective in analysis. This paper corrects for these inadequacies.
Data from 1979 through 1990 from the National Hospital Discharge Survey, an annual survey by the National Center for Health Statistics, were analyzed.
Between 1979 and 1990 there was a 576% increase in the rate of discharges of drug-using parturient women in the United States and a 456% increase in the rate of discharges of drug-affected newborns. After adjustment for underreporting, a "best estimate" of the number of discharges from 1988 through 1990 was about 88,000 per year for drug-using parturient women and about 48,000 per year for drug-affected newborns.
Although the data support the occurrence of a national epidemic of drug use among pregnant women during the 1980s, the size and severity of this epidemic have been overstated.
一直缺乏关于使用药物的孕妇数量以及受药物使用影响的新生儿数量的可靠全国性数据。缺乏此类数据的主要原因是抽样和数据收集程序不充分,以及分析中缺乏风险评估视角。本文纠正了这些不足之处。
分析了美国国家卫生统计中心年度调查——全国医院出院调查1979年至1990年的数据。
1979年至1990年期间,美国使用药物的产妇出院率增长了576%,受药物影响的新生儿出院率增长了456%。在对漏报情况进行调整后,1988年至1990年期间使用药物的产妇出院人数的“最佳估计”约为每年88,000人,受药物影响的新生儿出院人数约为每年48,000人。
尽管数据支持20世纪80年代美国孕妇中出现全国性药物使用流行,但这种流行的规模和严重程度被夸大了。