Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rate of opiate withdrawal in newborns up dramatically over 20 years, study finds

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Feb, 2015 10:26 AM
  • Rate of opiate withdrawal in newborns up dramatically over 20 years, study finds

TORONTO — The number of babies born with symptoms of opioid withdrawal because of their mother's use of the medications has jumped 15-fold in Ontario over the last two decades, reflecting increased prescribing of the potent and addictive pain killers, researchers say.

Most of those babies were born to women who were prescribed an opioid such as codeine, oxycodone or morphine by their doctors, both before and during pregnancy, says the study published Wednesday in the journal CMAJ Open.

Researchers found that the rates of newborn withdrawal — called neonatal abstinence syndrome — in Ontario grew from about 0.3 per 1,000 live births in 1992 to 4.3 per 1,000 in 2011.

"That's a big increase," said principal researcher Dr. Suzanne Turner, a family physician at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto who specializes in providing obstetrical care for women with addictions.

Over the 20-year period, data showed there were almost 3,100 infants born in the province suffering symptoms of neonatal abstinence syndrome, which mimic those in adults going through withdrawal from an opioid.

However, the largest proportion of babies with the syndrome — 1,901, or almost two-thirds — occurred in the last five years of the study, a period when prescribing of opiates like oxycodone for pain was on the rise.

Almost half of the infants were born to women who were eligible for publicly funded prescription drugs at the time of delivery, anonymized prescription records show. The women had been prescribed an opiate at various time periods, ranging from one or two years before delivery to 100 days before delivery.

However, as their due date approached, many of the women were shifted from opioids to methadone, a drug prescribed almost exclusively to people addicted to pain killers. In recent years, addiction to prescription opioids has supplanted heroin addiction as the most common reason to treat someone with methadone.

"So it suggests that women were prescribed opiates to treat pain prior to their pregnancies and at some point an addiction was identified and they were switched to methadone," said Turner.

"That's really important because we know that methadone is actually good in pregnancy because it stabilizes mom, and babies are more likely to be born at term and at high birth weight and healthy," she said.

"But the concern to me is how do we address the fact that they were prescribed opiates prior to pregnancy and is there something we can do at that stage to prevent the transition to addiction and then requiring methadone."

Infants experiencing post-natal withdrawal are often irritable, cry more, and can have vomiting and diarrhea, all of which can affect weight gain and put them at risk for seizures if the condition is not identified.

"This is a treatable condition. If the babies get morphine, which is typically the standard of care ... they're not in withdrawal and then we slowly wean (them off) that dose of morphine over time."

Still, having a newborn in the nursery or in the neonatal intensive care unit for two or three weeks can be stressful for families, Turner said, suggesting that preventing addiction by using alternative pain-relief therapies when possible would pay dividends for both mothers and their babies.

"It speaks to the fact that doctors need to be aware there is the risk of addiction if women are prescribed opiates prior to pregnancy, and if they're of child-bearing age, those risks should be assessed."

As well, women should be counselled that the use of any opioid during pregnancy can cause neonatal withdrawal, especially since unplanned pregnancies are common among women with addictions, she said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Pneumonia raises risk of heart attack, stroke in older adults, study finds

Pneumonia raises risk of heart attack, stroke in older adults, study finds
TORONTO — A new study suggests that seniors who develop a bout of pneumonia severe enough to require hospitalization are at an increased risk of having a heart attack, stroke, or dying of heart failure.

Pneumonia raises risk of heart attack, stroke in older adults, study finds

Eleven-year-old aboriginal girl who refused chemotherapy dies

Eleven-year-old aboriginal girl who refused chemotherapy dies
An 11-year-old aboriginal girl who made headlines with her choice to abandon chemotherapy in favour of alternative healing methods to treat her cancer has died.

Eleven-year-old aboriginal girl who refused chemotherapy dies

RCMP Seeks Public's Help In Finding B.C. Woman Who Went Missing In 1982

RCMP Seeks Public's Help In Finding B.C. Woman Who Went Missing In 1982
LILLOOET, B.C. — RCMP in Lillooet, B.C., are appealing for the public's help in finding a woman who went missing more than three decades ago.

RCMP Seeks Public's Help In Finding B.C. Woman Who Went Missing In 1982

Wynne proposes national infrastructure partnership: 'We all know the reality'

Wynne proposes national infrastructure partnership: 'We all know the reality'
OTTAWA — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne is proposing a sweeping national infrastructure partnership between the provinces and the federal government.

Wynne proposes national infrastructure partnership: 'We all know the reality'

Chapters To Close Robson Store In Downtown Vancouver; Blames Rent Hike

Chapters To Close Robson Store In Downtown Vancouver; Blames Rent Hike
VANCOUVER — Indigo Books & Music Inc. (TSX: IDG) says it will shut down its Robson Street Chapters location by the end of June because of a rent increase.

Chapters To Close Robson Store In Downtown Vancouver; Blames Rent Hike

Political activity audit strips Dying with Dignity of charitable tax status

Political activity audit strips Dying with Dignity of charitable tax status
OTTAWA — The federal government is stripping Dying with Dignity Canada of its charitable tax status following a political activity audit by the Canada Revenue Agency.

Political activity audit strips Dying with Dignity of charitable tax status