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Release Date: December 6, 1999
Contact: Debbie Klayman Enck
(215)
456-7326
klaymand@aehn2.einstein.edu
Poverty Impacts Mental Development Of Children Exposed To Cocaine Before
Birth
Poverty may have a stronger impact than drug exposure on the mental development of
children who had been exposed to cocaine before birth, new research suggests.
Preschool-age children who had been exposed to cocaine before birth performed no worse
on a standard test of problem solving than did a similar group of low-income children who
had no cocaine exposure. Both groups, however, performed worse than a comparison group of
mixed-income children.
"Most reports on the effects of prenatal exposure on children's growth and
development are from studies of children found in populations of lower socioeconomic
groups," said study head Hallam Hurt, MD, Albert Einstein Medical Center,
Philadelphia. "Poverty has been associated with an array of environmental risk
factors including fewer resources, poorly educated parents, and violence
that pose a threat to healthy development."
The researchers watched 61 children who had been exposed to cocaine and 81 children
with no drug exposure as they played with the "Goodman Lock Box," a large red
box with ten compartments each containing a toy. They noted three categories of activity
as the children played: "aimless actions" such as repeatedly opening and
closing a door "competence" such as successfully unlocking and
re-locking a door and "mental organization" such as successfully
exploring a series of compartments. The children were tested at age three and a half and
again at four and a half. The researchers report their findings in the current issue of
the Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics.
Children who had been exposed to cocaine scored no worse than the group without drug
exposure on all three kinds of activity. Both groups of children, however, scored 23 to 41
percent lower on measures of mental organization when compared with 232 children from a
variety of social and economic backgrounds. These differences remained significant even
after the investigators controlled for differences in the children's IQ scores and
their attendance at preschool, two factors associated with performance on such tests.
"If in utero cocaine exposure does contribute to these children's long-term
outcomes, the effect may be overshadowed by the larger impact of pervasive disadvantage
that is characteristic of our group," said Hurt. "For these children, increasing
access to public resources and creating a stable learning environment may foster the
development of more organized approaches to problem solving. Such interventions can
improve learning and adaptive skills which, in turn, will increase the children's
chances for success in more complex environments such as school."
The research was supported by a grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the
Albert Einstein Society of the Albert Einstein Health Care Network.
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The Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics is
published bimonthly by the Society for Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics. For
information about the journal, contact Mary Sharkey at (212) 595-7717.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Director of Communications
202.387.2829
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