1. The special prenatal clinic: one approach to women and substance abuse.
- Author
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Carrington BW, Loftman PO, Jones K, Williams D, and Mitchell JL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Cannabis, Child, Cocaine, Community Health Services, Female, Health Behavior, Humans, New York City, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications prevention & control, Risk Factors, Urban Population, Pregnancy in Adolescence, Prenatal Care, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Substance-Related Disorders prevention & control
- Abstract
We aimed to determine if the trend in substance use in this central core of a large inner-city area confirmed an increase in marijuana use among young women < 22 years of age as childbearing years were beginning or if marijuana use and harder drug use were greatest among women beyond the teens and the early second decade of life and to describe one prenatal care intervention. Statistical reports for the Special Prenatal Clinic, a Harlem clinic for women with a current or past history of substance use, were reviewed from 1985 (the clinic's inception) through March 1996 to determine the trends, patterns, and types of drug use. Findings chronicled the beginning and rise in crack cocaine use, especially after 1986, confirmed an increase in marijuana use by adolescents since 1992, and suggest that the risk for use of hard drugs increases with age, predominantly in the childbearing years. Intervention by the Special Prenatal Clinic aided case-finding, allowed for comprehensive care, offered women opportunities for behavior change, and increased their chances of keeping their babies after delivery.
- Published
- 1998
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