Cocaine-Exposed Infants: Social, Legal, and Public Health Issues (Drugs, Health, and Social Policy, #5)

by James A. Inciardi, Hilary L. Surratt, and Christine A. Saum

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Book cover for Cocaine-Exposed Infants

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Research in the mid-1980s on the effects of prenatal drug abuse characterized cocaine-exposed children as moody, inconsolable, less socially interactive and less able to bond than other children. It was concluded that these conditions were irreversible. However, methodological problems in these early studies, combined with the fact that cocaine-using mothers abuse other drugs as well, has left the research and public health communities uncertain as to the cause and effect relationship between cocaine use and pre/postnatal consequences.

Cocaine-Exposed Infants examines what is known about the problem and unravels some of the contradictions in the literature. The book also explores, in depth, the media frenzy over 'crack babies' and the resulting legislation in the United States that served to criminalize drug use during pregnancy.

  • ISBN10 1452249342
  • ISBN13 9781452249346
  • Publish Date 1 April 1997
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint SAGE Publications Inc
  • Format eBook
  • Pages 128
  • Language English