Publication | Closed Access
Prenatal Alcohol Exposure and Childhood Behavior at Age 6 to 7 Years: I. Dose-Response Effect
487
Citations
34
References
2001
Year
Testing was available for 501 parent-children dyads. Almost one fourth of the women denied alcohol use during pregnancy. Low levels of alcohol use were reported in 63.8% and moderate/heavy use in 13% of pregnancies. Increasing prenatal alcohol exposure was associated with lower birth weight and gestational age, higher lead levels, higher maternal age, and lower education level, prenatal exposure to cocaine and smoking, custody changes, lower socioeconomic status, and paternal drinking and drug use at the time of pregnancy. Children with any prenatal alcohol exposure were more likely to have higher CBCL scores on Externalizing (Aggressive and Delinquent) and Internalizing (Anxious/Depressed and Withdrawn) syndrome scales and the Total Problem Score. The odds ratio of scoring in the clinical range for Delinquent behavior was 3.2 (1.3-7.6) in children with any prenatal exposure to alcohol compared with nonexposed controls. The threshold dose was evaluated with the 3 prenatal alcohol exposure groups. One-way ANOVA revealed a significant between group difference for Externalizing (Aggressive and Delinquent) and the Total Problem Score. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
1973 | 3.8K | |
1979 | 1.6K | |
1993 | 898 | |
1981 | 745 | |
1975 | 450 | |
1991 | 322 | |
1988 | 310 | |
Association of Prenatal Alcohol Exposure With Behavioral and Learning Problems in Early Adolescence Heather Carmichael Olson, Ann P. Streissguth, Paul D. Sampson, Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry Substance AbuseBehavioral SciencesSubstance UseAlcohol MisuseEarly Life Exposure | 1997 | 278 |
1997 | 277 | |
1990 | 277 |
Page 1
Page 1