Bottoms Up?: New Research Finds Some Alcohol May Be Safe In Pregnancy

OK, it’s not exactly “bottoms up”, but research published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health finds that moderate drinking during pregnancy is not harmful to a developing fetus.  I have heard this before, when I spoke with Dr. Michael Broder who wrote The Panic Free Pregnancy, but neither of us — at the time — expected the mainstream media to publish anything of the sort.  After all, everyone from the Centers for Disease Control to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists says don’t drink at all while pregnant.  This new research, however, has started a conversation.  I spoke with Texas Children’s Pavillion for Women obstetrician Dr. Codi Weiner to get her thoughts on the methology and conclusions of the research, as well as to determine what she considers to be moderate drinking.  This is what she had to say:

Note:  In response to the publication of this research, The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists tweeted out this statement:

@acognews: the jury may be out for researchers, but ACOG recommends that pregnant women avoid alcohol

BTW: For more on what Dr. Broder says is safe — and unsafe — for you and your fetus during pregnancy, from eating sushi to coloring your hair, you can listen to this Pea in the Podcast here.

Pregnant or Breastfeeding? You Need This App!

Photo Courtesy of Texas Tech Health Sciences Center

Many pregnant women and nursing moms spend hours scouring the internet to find out if the medicine they are taking or have been prescribed is safe for their baby.  The Infant Risk Center at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center now makes that search quick and easy. [Read more...]

Parenting News Roundup

In the news this week…

  • Keeping your kids healthy as a heatwave smothers the nation.
  • Recognizing drowning so you can stop it.
  • Do the children of working mothers struggle more than those of stay-at-home moms?
  • New Zealand bans weird baby names.

Please listen here: [Read more...]

An Inspiring Birth Story

Milo & Everett

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics has found that in 2009 — the most recent year for which complete information is available –  the cesarean section rate hit another record high at nearly 33 percent. The International Cesarean Awareness Network (ICAN) points out that this is the 13th consecutive year cesarean rates have increased. It says a surgical birth rate of nearly 33 percent roughly equates to 1,359,105 out of the 4,131,019 births in the United States.  C-section rates for multiple births are even higher.  They are also higher for breech babies (some docs won’t even try to deliver a breech naturally), women with preeclampsia, and women whose labors are induced.  If you’re dealing with all of these issues, you’re almost guaranteed a date with a scalpel.

But not Elysia and her twins.  Please read their amazing story: [Read more...]

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