FASD 2013 EPIDEMIOLOGY of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders and Prenatal Alcohol Exposure von Ekkehart Paditz | Current results of the last 5 years from 2008/20009 to 2012 from Australia, Brazil, Germany, France, Ghana, Great Britain, Israel, Japan, Canada, Korea, Columbia, New Zealand, Poland, Romania, Russia, Sweden, Uganda, Uruguay, USA | ISBN 9783942622134

FASD 2013 EPIDEMIOLOGY of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders and Prenatal Alcohol Exposure

Current results of the last 5 years from 2008/20009 to 2012 from Australia, Brazil, Germany, France, Ghana, Great Britain, Israel, Japan, Canada, Korea, Columbia, New Zealand, Poland, Romania, Russia, Sweden, Uganda, Uruguay, USA

von Ekkehart Paditz, Anke Rissmann und Dorit Goetz, Vorwort von James Fitzpatrick, herausgegeben von Ekkehart Paditz, übersetzt von Melissa Dow
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonEkkehart Paditz
Autor / AutorinEkkehart Paditz
Autor / AutorinAnke Rissmann
Autor / AutorinDorit Goetz
Vorwort vonJames Fitzpatrick
Übersetzt vonMelissa Dow
Künstler / KünstlerinLucas d. Ältere Cranach
Künstler / KünstlerinLorian Hayes
Sonstige Zusammenstellung vonBettina Lindner
Buchcover FASD 2013 EPIDEMIOLOGY of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders and Prenatal Alcohol Exposure | Ekkehart Paditz | EAN 9783942622134 | ISBN 3-942622-13-0 | ISBN 978-3-942622-13-4
Leseprobe

This volume is intended for physicians, nurses and
caretakers, midwives, psychologists, and key persons
working in health and education policy, as
well as all other interested parties who deals with
the subject of FASD and maternal alcohol consumption
during pregnancy.

FASD 2013 EPIDEMIOLOGY of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders and Prenatal Alcohol Exposure

Current results of the last 5 years from 2008/20009 to 2012 from Australia, Brazil, Germany, France, Ghana, Great Britain, Israel, Japan, Canada, Korea, Columbia, New Zealand, Poland, Romania, Russia, Sweden, Uganda, Uruguay, USA

von Ekkehart Paditz, Anke Rissmann und Dorit Goetz, Vorwort von James Fitzpatrick, herausgegeben von Ekkehart Paditz, übersetzt von Melissa Dow
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonEkkehart Paditz
Autor / AutorinEkkehart Paditz
Autor / AutorinAnke Rissmann
Autor / AutorinDorit Goetz
Vorwort vonJames Fitzpatrick
Übersetzt vonMelissa Dow
Künstler / KünstlerinLucas d. Ältere Cranach
Künstler / KünstlerinLorian Hayes
Sonstige Zusammenstellung vonBettina Lindner
Current analysis of FASD epidemiology and
the prevalence of maternal alcohol consumption
during pregnancy in the last five years from
2008/2009 to 2012 show from an active case
search that in elementary schools, at least one child
with FASD per class (1:21–25) must be expected
(Italy, MAY 2011; Croatia, PETKOVIC 2010).
Population-based studies on the state or federal level
reveal a significantly lower frequency (Germany,
Paditz 2012; Saxony-Anhalt/Deutschland, GOETZ
& RISSMANN 2012 in this volume; Israel,
Senecky 2009). Several indicators, such as maternal
alcohol consumption in 14% of women from Israel,
indicate that the real rate of incidence is higher.
The range of incidence of prenatal alcohol exposure
is found in national, cross-regional, or multicenter
surveys of between 2.5% in Canada and
54% in Russia (PubMed 949 studies 2008–2012,
including 21 studies from 13 countries with such
surveys). Mono-centric studies showed similar rates
of incidence between 6–29.5% (results from seven
countries).
Interviews with women from Australia (Aboriginal),
New Zealand (Niue), the USA (Hispanic/
Latina) and Ukraine indicate that prenatal alcohol
exposure is not only based on a lack of information
about embryo and fetal toxic effects of alcohol, but
that questions of self-image and the partnership
between men and women contribute significantly
to whether a woman enters into the vicious cycle
of alcohol consumption or not. In the same way, it
was found in Canada that the risk of maternal alcohol
consumption during pregnancy was increased
24-fold with the chronic abdominal pain of Colitis
Ulcerosa. Alcoholism and smoking increased this
risk “only” five or twofold, respectively (THAN &
JOHNSON 2010).
Epidemiology thus represents an essential tool for
the detection of initial conditions at the regional or
national level, as well as for the evaluation of the
effects of intervention, including the assessment of
relevant resources that are required for the care of
people with FASD. International comparisons are a
contributor, in that the experiences of other countries
are taken up, as well as benchmark projects are
initiated.
Epidemiology relies on well-defined diagnoses. A
list of differential diagnostics for FASD with
more than 25 relevant diagnoses pointed to the
possibility of false positive results. Geneticists from
Manchester (UK) found in 8.75% (7/80) of questionable
FASD cases, other diagnoses for which
existing symptoms could be held responsible
(DOUZGOU 2012). Subtle clinical observations
offered similar results in 1957 and 1968 in France
in FAS first accounts from ROQUETTE and
LEMOINE; also likely, set against the background
of France in the 50s and 60s of the 20th century,
France exhibited the highest alcohol consumption
world-wide, as well as that, in this period, the incidence
of congenital syphilis in numerous countries
declined significantly.