A growing number of pregnant women are using marijuana, and
the habit is expanding fastest among teens and young adults, a U.S.
study suggests.
Among
teen mothers under age 18, marijuana use during pregnancy surged from
about 13 percent in 2009 to
almost 22 percent in 2016, researchers
found. Over that same period, the proportion of pregnant women aged 18
to 24 using marijuana rose from 10 percent to 19 percent.
Across
all age groups, marijuana use during pregnancy increased from 4 percent
at the start of the study to 7 percent by the end.
“Prior
nationally representative studies have found that the prevalence of
marijuana use among U.S. adult pregnant women has increased over time;
however, these studies have not included objective measures of
biochemically verified marijuana use and likely underestimate the
prevalence,” said lead study author Kelly Young-Wolff and senior author
Dr. Nancy Goler, both of Kaiser Permanente Northern California in
Oakland.
“Our
study is important because it addressed key limitations of prior
studies by investigating trends in prenatal marijuana use using data
from a large California healthcare system with ‘gold standard’ universal
screening for prenatal marijuana use,” the authors said in an email.
Marijuana
is the most commonly used illegal drug during pregnancy, researchers
note in JAMA. Some previous research suggests that prenatal marijuana
exposure may impair fetal growth and neurodevelopment.
For
the study, researchers examined data on more than 279,000 pregnant
women who were treated at Kaiser Permanente facilities that did
universal screening for marijuana use as part of standard prenatal care.
Women
typically completed questionnaires asking about drug use when they were
around eight weeks pregnant and then got lab tests during the same
checkup or within the next two to four weeks.
Drug
tests sometimes revealed marijuana use that patients didn’t disclose on
the questionnaires, and some women who reported drug use passed the
screening tests, the study found.
Among
women who screened positive for marijuana use, 55 percent failed the
lab tests but denied drug use on the questionnaires. Another 16 percent
of women passed the drug tests but disclosed marijuana use on the
questionnaires.
It’s
possible, but unlikely, that some lab tests revealed drug use before
pregnancy because marijuana can be detected up to about 30 days after
the last use, researchers note. The results of drug screening early in
pregnancy also might not reflect what happens for the remainder of
pregnancy.
“We
are just scratching the surface in terms of understanding cannabis use
in pregnancy,” said Dr. Marcel Bonn-Miller, a researcher at the
University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine in Philadelphia
who wasn’t involved in the study.
Although
results from screening in Northern California might not reflect rates
of drug use in other parts of the study, the trend is still alarming,
Bonn-Miller said by email.
“The more we study cannabis use during pregnancy, the more we are realizing how harmful it can be,” Bonn-Miller added.
Marijuana
use in pregnancy may be on the rise in part because the legalization of
medical marijuana has made people think of the drug as less dangerous,
even during pregnancy, said Barbara Yankey, a public health researcher
at Georgia State University in Atlanta who wasn’t involved in the study.
“Because
of the possibility of concurrent use of marijuana and other substances
of abuse, the evidence of its direct association with preterm labor,
fetal growth restriction, preterm birth, low birthweight and stillbirth
is still debatable, though these adverse effects lean more towards an
increased likelihood of occurrence,” Yankey said by email.
“Developmental
adverse effects and complications of marijuana use on the unborn child
also depend on the frequency and dose of marijuana use,” Yankey added.
(Reuters
Health) -
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2BDaMEa JAMA
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