Newswise — More than half of women in France continue to drink alcohol during their pregnancies, according to a new French study. However, the researchers also found that most of these women are uninformed about the risks to their babies' health.

"Our results surprised us because we didn't think that the women were so massively going to answer that they were so ignorant of the dangers of alcohol during pregnancy," said Ingrid de Chazeron of the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, who led the study.

The study, published in the May issue of Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, compiled data from 837 pregnant women at public and private obstetric centers who participated in the study between July 2003 and June 2004.

The women responded to a survey that asked about their drinking patterns during pregnancy, and 52.2 percent said they had used alcohol — having at least one drink —during the time. The researchers noted this was a "huge difference" from the United States, where only 12 percent of pregnant women report any alcohol use. Moreover, 13.7 percent of the participants said they had at least one binge-drinking episode where they had five or more drinks on one occasion.

de Chazeron and her colleagues said that drinking wine and beer is part of the "regular eating habits" in France and there is a lot of controversy over the safety of occasional drinking during pregnancy.

"At the time of our study, I don't think that women had been aware of the risks to their baby's health about drinking," de Chazeron said. "First, there was not enough campaigning about the dangers of alcohol during pregnancy "¦ and [women] do not believe that small consumptions, even regularly, can influence the future of their child."

Past evidence has proven that drinking alcohol during pregnancy can lead to fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS), one of the main causes of mental retardation and birth defects. In the new study, two women gave birth to babies with FAS.

The question of how much alcohol is safe to consume during pregnancy is not as controversial in the United States, where the advice from ob/gyns is mostly consistent.

"The common advice given by ob/gyns is that abstinence is the safest way to eliminate the possibility of your child having FAS," said Chemen Tate, M.D., chief resident of obstetrics and gynecology at Indiana University School of Medicine. "When pressed [by patients], with 'c'mon, one drink won't hurt,' most ob/gyns would admit that one drink in nine months would not likely result in full-blown FAS, but we do not know the amount of alcohol it takes to cause any one of the fetal alcohol spectrum disorders. The potential outcome is definitely not worth the gamble."

Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research: Contact Mary Newcomb at (317) 375-0819 or [email protected] or visit http://www.alcoholism-cer.com

de Chazeron I, et al. Is pregnancy the time to change alcohol consumption habits in France? Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research. 32(5), 2008.

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Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research