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Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

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Page 1: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa

Betty Wakou

Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373November 7, 2002

Page 2: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Prenatal Exposure to Alcohol Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS)

• FAS –a set of birth defects– Growth deficiency (delayed physical growth and devt)– A characteristic set of minor facial traits—normalize with

growth – Mental and behavioral deficits (the effects of alcohol induced

damage to the developing brain are life long-devastating to children and families)

– Demonstrate difficulties with learning, memory, attention, and problem solving

– Problems with mental health and social interaction – Most common nonhereditary, most preventable mental

retardation

Page 3: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Prevalence Estimates of FAS

• Identified in France in 1968 and US in 1973• Between 0.5 – 3 per 1000 live births (Stratton et al., 1996)

• US rates: 0.33 to 2.2 per 1000 (Abel & Sokol, 1991; 1987)

• Developed countries: 0.97 per 1000 (Abel, 1995)

• American Indians 10 per 1000 (May et al., 1991)

• African Americans 2.29 (Abel, 1995)

• S.Africa Western Cape Province 39.2 to 42.9 per 1000 (May et al., 2000)

Page 4: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Mechanisms of Alcohol Induced Damage to the Fetus

• Multiple actions at different sites• Developing brain- development and function,

migration and survival of nerve cells• Embryonic cell layer that develops into the

bones and cartilage of the head and face-premature cell death

Page 5: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Diagnosis of FAS

• Identifies a small proportion of children• Easy when facial features and growth retardation are

present AND known maternal alcohol use in pregnancy

• Children may lack the characteristic facial defects and growth deficiency but still have alcohol induced mental impairments just as serious or more serious that FAS - ARND (alcohol related neurodevelopment disorder) and ARBD of the skeleton and organ systems

• A single measure cannot explain all the deleterious effects from alcohol exposure during pregnancy.

Page 6: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Skin folds at the corner of the eye

Low nasal bridge

Short nose

Indistinct groove between nose and upper lip

Small head circumference

Small eye opening

Small midface

Thin upper lip

Facial Features of FAS

Page 7: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002
Page 8: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Effects of alcohol exposure on growth

Head circumference

Birth weight

Length

Page 9: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Effects of alcohol exposure on growth and aptitude

Head circumference

Mental summary

score

Academic achievement summary score

Page 10: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

FAS

• Reduced intellectual functioning and academic skills

• Deficits in verbal learning, spatial memory and reasoning, reaction time, balance, and other cognitive and motor skills

• Social functioning worsens during adolescence and adult hood with increased rates of mental health disorders.

Page 11: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Risk Factors Associated with FAS

• age >25 y • parity >3 • separated, divorced or never

married • high blood alcohol conc • binge drinking • long history of drinking • heavy drinking by male

partner or by any family member

• culture tolerant of heavy drinking

• low socioeconomic status • work in a male dominated

occupation, • unemployment, • social transience, • low self-esteem, • loss of children to other care, • sexual dysfunction, • use of multiple substances,

cigarette smoking

Page 12: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Alcohol Research In Africa

• Alcohol research in Africa is still in its infancy• There are few reliable data on alcohol consumption

and harm in general population • Drinking is on the increase in rural and urban areas • Drinking in the traditional setting is changing• New is drinking in bars and solitary drinking at home• Most literature is on surveys on alcohol use• Not many on drinking and its association with alcohol

problems.

Page 13: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Alcohol Drinking in S. Africa

• The legal ‘dop’ system- practice of paying farm workers in part with alcohol

• Institutionalized element for 300 years • Successive laws were in place• In 1961 an Act outlawed payment with alcohol

as part of the wage• Dispensing of wine as a ‘gift’ was not

addressed

Page 14: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Alcohol Drinking in S. A. West. Cape Province

• Alcohol consumption among farm workers is extraordinarily high

• Western Cape - drinking is about twice that of urban areas

• 50% of traumatic injuries are alcohol related and are 30% higher than in urban areas

Page 15: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Research Support

• National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism supported pilot studies in S. Africa

• Patterns of FAS occurrence, maternal risk, FAS characteristics similar to those in North American communities BUT higher

• May et al. (2000) measured 1st grade children

Page 16: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Epidemiology of FAS in S. African Community in the Western Cape Province

(May et al., 2000)

Objective: To determine the characteristics of FAS in S. African community

• Methods: - Active case ascertainment• Passive case ascertainment

– Birth records, registries, clinic-based systems, population-based initiatives

• Subjects: - 992 first grade pupils

Page 17: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Population Distribution

Population Distribution in Western Cape Province

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Coloured Black White Other

Population

Page 18: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Diagnosis of FAS-Institute of Medicine

1. Facial and other dysmorphology

2. Diminished structural growth for age

3. Developmental (intelligence and social skills) delay

4. Maternal alcohol consumption

Page 19: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Results

• 40.5 - 46.4 per 1000 age 5-9y in schools• 39.2-42.9 per 1000 age specific community rates• 18-141x > US rates• Early stages of economic development • Low SES • Increased access to alcohol • Loss of folk and traditional culture

Page 20: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Factors Associated with Alcohol Consumption

• Patterns of binge and heavy drinking that produce FAS are associated with – rapid community change – detribalization – rural-to-urban transitions – progressions from traditional to modern (secular)

culture

• These changing social and cultural contexts, adaptation, coping and recreation are replaced with alcohol

Page 21: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

FAS Risk Factors

• Advancing maternal age• High gravidity and parity • Early onset of regular drinking career • Quantity, frequency, and timing of maternal

drinking during pregnancy • Socioeconomic status• Rural residence residence on certain grape

growing, wine producing farms

Page 22: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Issues in Fetal Alcohol Syndrome

• Maternal alcohol use is controllable BUT• Prevention needs to use existing theory and

knowledge in the fields of health promotion and health education

• Pay attention to the risk factors that affect the target population’s use of alcohol and behaviors

Page 23: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome In Africa Betty Wakou Childhood Nutrition NSCI 5373 November 7, 2002

Levels of Prevention

1. Primary - stop maternal drinking before it starts

2. Secondary- early detection and treatment of maternal drinking

3. Tertiary - to change behavior of high risk women

1. Universal – promote health and well-being of all people-use media, policy and environmental change

2. Selection – intervene in target populations at risk using trained health personnel

3. Indicated – intervene is women that drink