How Personal Perspectives Shape Health Professionals’ Perceptions of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder and Risk
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Context
2.2. Study Design
2.3. Participants, Materials and Procedures
3. Results
3.1. Theme 1: Personal Reflections on Alcohol Consumption and Pregnancy
When I had my first daughter, I thought I could have a drink or two in pregnancy and they would be fine … now, having been to the [FASD] conference, I wouldn’t drink in pregnancy. And I would tell my friends not to. They can make their own choices, but having seen from my very scientific brain, how it affects molecules in the brain, that’s what made the difference for me …(Psychiatrist)
When I had my children, I didn’t know about fetal alcohol … the midwives never said anything, the hospital never said anything about it, there was nothing at all … I knew that drinking alcohol during pregnancy was wrong [but] I didn’t have any further knowledge … or that one drink or two drinks could have a huge impact on that baby, I didn’t know at all. I think I just went on my basic knowledge of right and wrong, that you shouldn’t really drink alcohol because it is not that good.(Social Worker)
He said to me: “Do you have any funny cravings?” And I said: “Oh it’s really weird, I’m really craving beer”, and he laughed, and he said: “Well, if you wanna [sic] have a glass of wine every now and then, that would be fine.” And, I thought, that’s only five years ago.(Psychologist)
You start to look at your own child [and think] “Oh, my God is there [a risk] there? I didn’t know that.” I did drink and I stopped when I got, when I found out I was pregnant, you know. So there’s always that, but I think it’s getting out that knowledge … you know, and that it’s a Russian roulette. Now, if you’re into playing Russian roulette that’s fine, play the game, but that’s what you’re playing and I guess that’s the concept I’d never, never had, as someone wanting to have babies.(Psychologist)
I’m really intrigued actually because I think that in my peer group we all drink too much, and we all [collude] in not thinking about it very hard. That we all accept it, it becomes normal to have a glass a wine most evenings, and it’s cheap and it’s not, you know, it’s not abnormal. And we’ve normalized it to a degree that we don’t stand back and go, actually, you know, 30 years ago people didn’t use to keep wine in their houses, and they didn’t have it every week, they had it [at] Christmas and birthdays and that’s it. And it was normalized enormously, and because we’re drinking it changes it for our kids as well. It’s very normal, even if you’re not getting drunk, you know, I don’t get drunk every night, but I do enjoy a glass of wine, but I’m still drinking.(Pediatrician)
I would have to put my hand up and say I would consume alcohol several times a week, and I think that’s become quite normal. What I mean by that is a couple of drinks sometimes after a hard day at work, social events, that kind of thing, so I think the general consumption of alcohol by women in this country has increased.(Child Protection Coordinator)
3.2. Theme 2: Reflections on Others’ Prenatal Alcohol Consumption
A friend of a friend of mine was pregnant quite recently and I was talking to my friend and I knew she was a bit of a drinker and I said: “Oh, is she still drinking?” And she said: “Yep, she is still drinking”—two units twice a week because she thinks that is OK, and you can’t tell her otherwise, and I kind of didn’t see her because I didn’t want to. I felt quite torn because I knew I would lose a friendship.(Psychiatrist)
I think we all just try and keep deluding ourselves. My GP doesn’t like to ask me about my alcohol use. It’s really funny, he doesn’t want to go there, but I think that’s because he drinks like I do, and so he doesn’t want to have to think about it himself … So one of the things, in all the stuff [Alcohol Healthwatch] sent us, there was loads of stuff about assessing people’s drinking habits, and my husband and I sat down with it and went “huh” and [I] immediately went out and bought smaller glasses … we don’t consider ourselves problem drinkers, but we drink very much like an awful lot of our peers, which is more than what the booklet suggests. But it’s just that societal concept that drinking is acceptable isn’t it—it’s the drug of choice.(Pediatrician)
Some of my colleagues, you know, have said “Oh, I don’t really like to think about fetal alcohol because you know I think of when I was pregnant and I drank a tiny bit or I drank quite a bit, did that damage my kids? But they kind of turned out all right. Or when my wife was pregnant or my friend …”(Psychiatrist)
Lots of our people drink through pregnancy, and nothing—there is no noticeable effect on the child that emerges. So you get: “Oh well, I drank with my last two pregnancies and nothing happened so why would it happen now?” Or: “My mother drank through all [her pregnancies]”—and that’s the attitude that you get.(Social Worker)
We’ve still got conflicting information coming out on national TV around the use of alcohol. And we’ve still got the perception of it’s not okay to challenge pregnant women if they’re drinking, you know. So we’ve got a society that doesn’t want to address these issues, and that makes it really quite difficult.(Counsellor)
3.3. Theme 3: Social Constructions of Alcohol Use and Misuse
You hear very little about FAS[D] … because we’re a culture of drinkers and if we start talking about that, people are going to say: “Well, you know bugger you, I want to drink.” There’s no recognition in society that alcohol is probably one of the more damaging drugs that we actually have out there and it’s freely available.(Social Worker)
Think about how much the New Zealand government gets from excise duty in a year. I don’t carry this number in my head anymore because it is a horrifying number, and I think it’s in the billions, and if you think the sophistication of the alcohol industry in its marketing initiatives and just how much you can do with money in terms of shifting people’s perceptions …(Psychiatrist)
I think we’re so fixated on drunk people that we’re just letting all the drinkers who are not drunk kind of swing by, but it’s pretty easy to drink at home and drink more than is good for you without ever feeling drunk or getting into any sort of trouble or mischief, but just quietly drinking more than you should.(Pediatrician)
If people feel like you drank in pregnancy, and you have a difficult child, then that’s your problem, not seeing that addiction is, it’s like most mental health [illnesses] … People don’t feel like they need to take a societal responsibility for managing it.(Psychiatrist)
I think the educated young women now don’t drink during pregnancy. I might be wrong, because I’m aware that there’s a whole sort of middleclass of educated women who drink quite heavily too. So I’m not sure about the effects of that. I guess the people I see tend to be at the lower end of the social economic strata …(Speech Language Therapist)
I know that I’m horrified at the number of referrals I get for domestic violence where over-consumption of alcohol is an issue … women are drinking a lot more in a way that they weren’t back a generation or so. Therefore, one has to, I guess, assume that that affects women who are pregnant … So if you live in an environment of alcohol, heavy alcohol consumption, whether it’s with a partner, whether it’s with a family history … I think there are some women who are aware and would give up alcohol, but within those sorts of groupings, I would be cynical about how many. That’s where, I think, the education needs to be targeted.(Child Protection Coordinator)
It’s a difficult one, I think, because I’m a person who does believe in people’s human rights and the right to make decisions for themselves and to live life the way they want to live it. However, because I work right in the midst of this, I think it’s hard not to be asking the questions of yourself when it comes to children, and unborn children. Who do they actually belong to? Do they actually belong to the woman who’s having them? Do they belong to wider society?(Child Protection Coordinator)
Are we trying to control women? It’s the whole thing about social medicine as well, so much seems to be about social control and because … we focus so much on in terms of individuals as well … it focuses on women as the problem, and women’s drinking happens in a context: it happens in the context of a society that values alcohol and is permissive around that. How are the men talking and supporting the women around this? I still think, within our cultural framework, it sets women up to be the problem and that makes it really hard for them to actually talk about it, for professionals to ask those questions, for women to actually answer honestly. It positions women as harming their children and women don’t go out intentionally to harm their children.(Counsellor)
3.4. Theme 4: Alcohol Compared to Other Drugs
If I went home and smoked a joint every night people would think badly of me, when in actual fact I’d probably do myself less harm … It seems to be more about, um, you know, whether it’s legal or illegal rather than risk. It’s another construct I’m trying to bash away at in the community.(Pediatrician)
You know women don’t smoke in pregnancy, well very rarely. And if you see a woman smoking and they are pregnant … it makes [me] feel quite physically sick and I want to go up and say to her: “You shouldn’t be smoking.” But I know that she knows, and so I often don’t, [and] I don’t think we have got there with alcohol in pregnancy. I do see a time when we will be there, but it kind of has to be a gently, gently approach.(Psychiatrist)
Some people would say [that] a glass a wine [or] a glass of beer is not as dangerous as a hard spirit, you know, people might categorize things, oh there’s no harm in a beer, you know people have a beer every night, there’s nothing wrong with a glass of wine, because they drink wine like they do coffee.(Social worker)
He had made a, what’s the word, an assumption on me that I was a white middle class woman who wouldn’t [binge drink] whilst I was pregnant. How does he know that I wasn’t a raving alcoholic, you know and that one glass of wine would actually lead to five? So, I don’t think there’s enough care around the information that’s given. I mean, there’s posters up where you go into the midwives, but you know, they ask you alcohol and drugs in your first [session, and] if you just say no then it’s glossed over, I mean I really don’t think much attention’s paid to it at all.(Psychologist)
He said: “Well, what about other drug use, surely that’s worse?” And I was a bit gob smacked really, and I said: “Well, what is worse? Nothing’s worse than alcohol, really.” Heroin’s not worse, you know, and actually that concept is there, which I think is why the midwives always write down, oh, smoking cannabis and gloss over the alcohol because they get totally hung up on the drugs people are using and don’t think of alcohol as a drug in itself.(Pediatrician)
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Bagley, K.; Badry, D. How Personal Perspectives Shape Health Professionals’ Perceptions of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder and Risk. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 1936. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16111936
Bagley K, Badry D. How Personal Perspectives Shape Health Professionals’ Perceptions of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder and Risk. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2019; 16(11):1936. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16111936
Chicago/Turabian StyleBagley, Kerryn, and Dorothy Badry. 2019. "How Personal Perspectives Shape Health Professionals’ Perceptions of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder and Risk" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 11: 1936. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16111936
APA StyleBagley, K., & Badry, D. (2019). How Personal Perspectives Shape Health Professionals’ Perceptions of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder and Risk. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 16(11), 1936. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16111936