
Vol. 13, No. 2, 2007
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Research Report
Developmental Outcome in Children with Intrauterine Exposure to Substances
H.-C. Steinhausen, B. Blattmann, F. Pfund
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland
Address of Corresponding Author
Eur Addict Res 2007;13:94-100 (DOI: 10.1159/000097939)
Key Words
- Substance abuse disorder
- Mothers, substance abuse
- Offspring of substance-dependent mothers
- Prenatal exposure to cocaine
- Children, developmental outcome
Abstract
The developmental outcome of children born to Swiss substance-dependent mothers in a residential treatment program was studied in a sample of 61 children ranging from infancy to preadolescence (mean age = 5.10, SD = 3.10 years) by use of age-appropriate tests of intelligence. A large list of biological and psychosocial risk factors was tested for associations with outcome in the children. The mean profile of test findings across all age ranges was significantly lower than population norms and there was an excess of children with subnormal intellectual functioning. Performance IQ was associated negatively only with intrauterine substance exposure, but with none of the other risk factors. Among the various substances, predominantly heroin or methadone were responsible for this association when controls for nicotine or cannabis consumption were made. The study provides further evidence that intrauterine exposure to heroin and methadone negatively affects the developmental outcome in the offspring of substance-dependent mothers. Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel
Author Contacts H.-C. Steinhausen Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Zürich Neumünsterallee 9/Postfach, CH-8032 Zürich (Switzerland) Tel. +41 43 499 2730, Fax +41 43 499 2602 E-Mail steinh@kjpd.unizh.ch
Article Information
Number of Print Pages : 7
Number of Figures : 0, Number of Tables : 6, Number of References : 38 |
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