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Pregnant women's alcohol consumption : the predictive utility of intention to drink and prepregnancy drinking behaviour

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posted on 2008-11-01, 00:00 authored by S Zammit, Helen Skouteris, E Wertheim, S Paxton, J Milgrom
Objective: This study had two aims: (1) to examine pregnant women's alcohol consumption across time from prepregnancy until childbirth and (2) to explore whether prepregnancy drinking and intention to drink predict prenatal alcohol consumption while controlling for relevant demographic variables.

Methods: At 17–21 weeks, 248 pregnant women completed questions about demographics, intention to drink alcohol during the subsequent pregnancy, and retrospective measures of prepregnancy and early pregnancy consumption. After this time, calendars were sent fortnightly assessing daily alcohol consumption until birth.

Results: For women who drank both prepregnancy and postpregnancy confirmation, average fortnight alcohol consumption in the first weeks of pregnancy was lower than during prepregnancy, and consumption continued to decrease between gestational weeks 1 and 8, particularly following pregnancy confirmation, after which it remained relatively stable. When predicting whether women drank in late pregnancy, intention accounted for unique variance after controlling for income and prepregnancy drinking. For women who drank after pregnancy confirmation, prepregnancy drinking quantity significantly predicted intention to drink, which in turn predicted fortnight alcohol consumption in later pregnancy, after controlling for prepregnancy drinking and income.

Conclusions: Findings highlight the need to measure alcohol consumption at multiple time points across pregnancy, the need for educating and supporting women to reduce consumption when planning pregnancies, and the usefulness of intention to drink as a predictor of drinking during pregnancy.

History

Journal

Journal of women's health

Volume

17

Pagination

1513 - 1522

Location

New Rochelle, N.Y.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1540-9996

eISSN

1931-843X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2008, Mary Ann Lievert Inc.