This comment deserves ttention

David,
This comment relates to both of your files today. First, a little  disclosure on my part. 30-odd years ago while still living in Winnipeg we  adopted our second child, a boy born to a teenage aboriginal mother. We were  aware that there were complications during the delivery, a result of a lack of  any prenatal care by the mother, but not until many years later did we discover  that the mother had a lengthy history of alcohol abuse.
The combination  of these factors resulted in years of frustration for our son and ourselves.  Eventually, a diagnosis of ADD confirmed our worst fears. To make a long story  short, a biography of our son would read like that of many young delinquents. In  the 70's there was little help available for children like our son and today he  still struggles with his addictive behaviour, but is finally making attempts at  recovery.
While today it is commonplace to see ads warning women about  the danger of drinking during a pregnancy, not that long ago the effects of  alcohol and drugs on a fetus were not well understood. As I now understand it,  the first trimester is particularly important in the brain development of a  fetus. Impulse control, general intellectual development, and a tendency toward  addictive behaviour seem to be a lifelong legacy of maternal substance use, not  only substance abuse.
I firmly believe that the societal cost of this  legacy is staggering, not only in financial terms but in the human misery and  suffering associated with it. A national problem like this requires multiple  interventions. But one that I have long believed would be worth considering is a  voluntary prenatal programme that would provide financial incentives for women  who abstain from alcohol and drugs during their pregnancy. Such an endeavour  might even include residential supports of various kinds to enable some women to  escape toxic social environments.
I realize that there are many public  health initiatives intended to deal with this problem, but to the best of my  knowledge, there is not a programme which offers women (particularly women with  limited financial resources) financial incentives to protect their unborn  children. Money talks.
Finally, the national tragedy of so many murdered  and missing aboriginal women does speak to the frightening presence of murderous  men in our society. While racial explanations might explain some of this  phenomenon, it seems to me that substance abuse and poverty in all its forms may  also be a major factor. How can we tolerate child poverty to the extent that we  do in BC and elsewhere and not expect tragic consequences. As the automotive ads  so clearly put it, "Pay me now or pay me later".
Dave C.


2 comments:
A very somber and thought provoking Post David, and I thank you for sharing it...............
I have also wondered what effect drugs and alcohol have on sperm, which we always seem to forget has an integral role in creating a fetus. Unfortunately, it makes sense that a drug-addled father could, through drugged sperm, be unwittingly harming his child-to-be. Let's get everybody to clean up their acts for their own sakes and that of any children they might have.
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