Alcohol Consumption During Pregnancy, USA 2002
Alcohol use during pregnancy is associated with health problems that adversely
affect the mother and fetus; no level of alcohol consumption during pregnancy
has been determined safe. Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) is recognized as the
foremost preventable condition involving neurobehavioral and developmental
abnormalities.
Women who drink during pregnancy place themselves at risk
for having a child with FAS or fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD). To
determine the alcohol consumption patterns among all women of childbearing age,
including those who are pregnant or might become pregnant, CDC analyzed data for
women aged 18--44 years from the 2002 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
(BRFSS) survey.
The results of that analysis indicated that
approximately 10% of pregnant women used alcohol, and approximately 2% engaged
in binge drinking or frequent use of alcohol. The results further indicated that
more than half of women who did not use birth control (and therefore might
become pregnant) reported alcohol use and 12.4% reported binge drinking. Women
who are pregnant or who might become pregnant should abstain from alcohol use.
CDC monitors the prevalence of alcohol use among women of childbearing
age through BRFSS. In 2002, with the inclusion of a family planning module in
the BRFSS survey, information became available to assess the alcohol consumption
patterns among pregnant women and also among women who might become pregnant.
BRFSS is a monthly, state-based, random-digit--dialed telephone survey of the
U.S. civilian, noninstitutionalized population aged >18 years in all 50
states, the District of Columbia, and three U.S. territories.
In 2002,
the median state/area response rate was 58.3% (range: 42.2%--82.6%). For 2002, a
total of 64,181 women aged 18--44 years were included as the general population
of childbearing-aged women. Participants were asked about their use of alcohol
during the 30 days preceding the interview.
Alcohol usage questions
included the number of days per week or month the respondents had at least one
drink, the average number of drinks consumed on a drinking day, the number of
times the respondents had five or more drinks per occasion, and the number of
times they drove when they had "perhaps too much to drink." The following
alcohol consumption patterns were assessed: any use (at least one drink on one
occasion), binge drinking (five or more drinks on one occasion), and frequent
drinking (seven or more drinks in a week or binge drinking).
In
addition, women were asked whether they or their partners were doing anything to
prevent pregnancy. Reasons were collected from women who responded that they or
their sex partners were not doing anything to prevent pregnancy.
For
this analysis, 4,404 women who might become pregnant were defined as those who
were not using any type of birth control and provided one of the following
reasons: wanted a pregnancy (52.4%), did not care whether pregnancy occurred
(19.1%), did not think they would become pregnant (14.3%), did not want to use
birth control (5.7%), feared the side effects of birth control (4.2%), thought
they were too old to become pregnant (1.8%), could not pay for birth control
(1.3%), or had lapsed in use of a method (1.2%).
Excluded from this
defined category were women who were not sexually active, had a same-sex
partner, had no sex partner, had undergone sterilization or hysterectomy, were
postpartum breastfeeding, were currently pregnant, had other unspecified reasons
for not using birth control, or did not provide any reason. Prevalences for
alcohol consumption patterns were calculated for women who were pregnant, those
who might become pregnant, and women of childbearing age overall.
A
total of 2,689 women reported that they were pregnant. Because of the limited
number of pregnant women available in the 2002 BRFSS sample population,
additional analyses were performed by focusing only on the demographic
characteristics of women who might become pregnant and who engaged in binge
drinking. To obtain appropriate statistics, weighted data analyses were
performed to reflect general population estimates, and standard errors were
calculated by using statistical analysis software.
The 2,689 women who
reported that they were pregnant and the 4,404 women who might become pregnant
represented population-weighted estimates of 4.7% and 7.6%, respectively. Among
those who reported not using birth control, 52.4% said that they wanted to
become pregnant.
The prevalence of binge drinking was 12.4%, both for
childbearing-aged women overall and for those who might become pregnant, and
1.9% for pregnant women. The prevalence of frequent drinking was 13.2% for
childbearing-aged women overall, 13.1% for women who might become pregnant, and
1.9% for pregnant women. The prevalence of any use of alcohol was 52.6% for the
childbearing-aged population overall, 54.9% for women who might become pregnant,
and 10.1% for pregnant women