GODDESSES, IT'S TIME TO COME TOGETHER !
Home Invites Members Groups Events News Blogs Polls Forums Chat
Home > Blogs > Post Content

BLACK BABIES MORE OFTEN SCREENED FOR DRUG EXPOSURE (1157 hits)


NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - African-American newborns may be more likely than their white counterparts to be screened for prenatal drug exposure, even in the absence of risk factors for it, a study at one medical center suggests.

Research shows that newborns admitted to neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) have a higher-than-average risk of having been exposed to illegal drugs during pregnancy. If staff suspect prenatal drug exposure, they may test an infant's urine or feces for evidence of it.

Some NICUs, though not all, have specific guidelines on what factors should trigger a newborn drug test.

The new study, published in the journal Pediatrics, shows that even at a center with such guidelines, there are racial discrepancies in rates of drug screening.

The study team examined medical records for more than 2,100 newborns admitted to the NICU at the University of Rochester Medical Center in New York in 2005 and 2006.

They found that among infants who met at least one of the NICU's criteria for drug screening, those born to African-American mothers were more likely to be tested: 35 percent, versus 13 percent of infants born to white mothers.

The same pattern was seen among newborns who did not meet the screening criteria. Among these infants, 5 percent of African Americans were tested for prenatal drug exposure, while only 1 percent of white newborns were.

Yet, when infants were screened, black babies were less likely to test positive for drug exposure. Four percent screened positive, versus 12 percent of white newborns who were tested.

The reasons for the racial discrepancy in screening rates are not clear, according to senior researcher Dr. Carl D'Angio, director of neonatal clinical research at the university.

One possibility, he told Reuters Health, is that the NICU's screening criteria were too complex.

D'Angio explained that the unit's guidelines included a "laundry list" of potential risk factors for staff to consider in deciding to drug test. Some of those factors, he said, have been strongly associated with higher odds of prenatal drug exposure -- such as a documented history of mothers' drug use, and a lack of prenatal care.

But some other criteria the NICU used have not been strongly linked to prenatal drug exposure, such as abnormalities of the urinary tract or genitals.

The complexity of the criteria, D'Angio said, may have made them hard to use objectively, and resulted in staff sometimes relying instead on "subjective cues" of maternal drug use -- which might have fed the racial discrepancy.

That is just a theory, however. "We don't know what drove the behavior," D'Angio said. "We can only describe the behavior."

The findings did lead the Rochester NICU to simplify its drug-screening criteria, D'Angio said. The guidelines now emphasize a smaller number of factors that are most strongly predictive of prenatal drug exposure -- including limited prenatal care and a history of drug use in the mother.

The hope is that the changes will improve compliance with the guidelines, and reduce any tendency to use subjective judgment, according to D'Angio.

He said the current findings suggest that other NICUs need to be aware of the potential for unequal application of newborn drug screening, and try to minimize those odds.

Newborn drug screening, D'Angio and his colleagues point out, "entails significant privacy, social, and legal risks for families."

Laws vary by state, but positive drug tests can result in families being reported to child protective services or, in some cases, law enforcement.
Posted By: Siebra Muhammad
Wednesday, May 19th 2010 at 8:19AM
You can also click here to view all posts by this author...

Report obscenity | post comment
Share |
Please Login To Post Comments...
Email:
Password:

 
Great, More American babies should be screened for Drug and Alcohol usage by their, "mothers"----


Wednesday, May 19th 2010 at 9:33AM
robert powell
"I view this as positive, because I feel for the newborn babies who are often born of a drug-users mothers. They'll have an early prevention to give those babes a healthy start at living." "Without the screening could mean more harmful benefits to their new lives."
Wednesday, May 19th 2010 at 10:33AM
MIISRAEL Bride
Well, I know for a fact that if they do it here in Texas they don't report it. My aunt had three babies while on crack, one with known fetal alcohol syndrome and one while on marijuana. The latest one has autism and she raised them until she decided to drop them off at my grandmothers because she 'just couldn't take it anymore'. The state had nothing to do with it and it's a sad shame, now we are stuck with these problems when her butt should have been in jail for abusing a fetus! Yes, it should be a crime.
Friday, January 14th 2011 at 1:51PM
Shannon Carter
Please Login To Post Comments...
Email:
Password:

 
More From This Author
FUNDRAISER FOR WOMENHEART, THE NATIONAL COALITION FOR WOMEN WITH HEART DISEASE
WHAT DOES IT REALLY MEAN WHEN SOMEONE SAYS "I AM PRO-LIFE"?
NOTICE TO ALL SITE MEMBERS RE: TRUMP HAVING A STROKE
SUPPORTERS PACK CATHOLIC CHURCH TO HEAR FARRAKHAN SPEAK ON FACEBOOK BAN
JUDGE JUDY DELIVERS VERDICT ON DONALD TRUMP (HER REACTION MAY SURPRISE YOU)
STEPHON CLARK IS A 22 YR. OLD MUSLIM, HIS BODY WAS IN SUCH BAD SHAPE THE MOSQUE COULDN'T DO THE RITUAL WASHING
VIRGINIA CHURCH HANGS MANNEQUIN FROM A TREE
SIXTH GRADER WRITES WILL "JUST IN CASE" THERE'S A SHOOTING AT HIS SCHOOL
Forward This Blog Entry!
Blogs Home

(Advertise Here)