September
is FASD Awareness Month. To mark this occasion, the Minnesota
Organization on Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (MOFAS) is leading the way in
increasing awareness and educating women on the importance of not
drinking alcohol
during pregnancy.
Fetal
Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD) can only be caused by a woman
drinking alcohol while pregnant. Despite myths, there is no scientific
evidence available that sets a “safe” amount of alcohol that will not
affect the developing fetus.
The U.S. Surgeon General, the Center for Disease Control, the American
Academy of Pediatrics, and the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists all advise pregnant women and women who could become
pregnant, to abstain completely from alcohol during
pregnancy. An estimated 5,367 babies are born each year in Minnesota
with some level of prenatal alcohol exposure. That is over 100 babies
born each week with potential brain damage and life-long struggles that
could have been prevented.
MOFAS
encourages all pregnant women and women trying to get pregnant to
remember 049 – zero alcohol for nine months. In Minnesota, nearly half
of all pregnancies are unplanned, and many women do not know they are
pregnant for up to 4 to
6 weeks after conception. If a woman is drinking alcohol during
pregnancy, it is never too late to stop drinking. Brain growth takes
place throughout pregnancy, so the sooner a woman stops drinking the
safer it will be for her and her baby. If a woman cannot
stop drinking, MOFAS encourages them to get help through a health care
provider, local Alcoholics Anonymous, or other local treatment center.
MOFAS educates and supports health care providers to ask every woman,
every time about their alcohol use and provide
information on FASD as part of preventive medicine.
For more information on alcohol use during pregnancy and a month long series of activities and events by MOFAS to create awareness and educate people on FASD, go to www.mofas.org.
For more information on alcohol use during pregnancy and a month long series of activities and events by MOFAS to create awareness and educate people on FASD, go to www.mofas.org.
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