'One Small Glass Of Wine' A Week During Pregnancy Won't Harm Child, Say Experts

Pregnant Women Can Have 'One Small Glass Of Wine A Week'
Open Image Modal
Alamy
Light drinking during pregnancy not linked to adverse behavioural or cognitive outcomes in childhood, study finds

Children born to women who drink one small glass of wine a week while pregnant are not likely to suffer any cognitive or behavioural problems, research suggests.

Light drinking during pregnancy "is not linked to adverse behavioural or cognitive outcomes in childhood", the new study found.

Previous studies have linked heavy drinking during pregnancy to health and development problems in children. But the authors wanted to examine the effects of low-level consumption.

The study, published in BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, saw more than 10,000 seven-year-olds take cognitive tests and their parents and teachers completed interviews and questionnaires to test the children's social and emotional behaviour.

The findings suggested that children born to light drinkers - those who drank two units or less a week - had lower behavioural difficulty scores than children born to mothers who abstained from drinking during pregnancy. Similarly they were found to have higher cognitive test scores for reading, maths and spatial skills tests.

However, when the authors adjusted the score for potential confounding factors, most of the results did not prove to be significant.

Have you read these recent stories?

Pregnancy Hits The Headlines
Danger of Tokophobia(01 of08)
Open Image Modal
A debilitating phobia of pregnancy and childbirth left an already bereaved mother with no choice other than to abort her second baby.Tokophobia affects up to one in ten women, with some so fearful they liken maternity wards to torture chambers.Charlotte Arnold suffered so badly, she ended up aborting her second child because she was too scared to continue with the pregnancy.Read more here. (credit:Alamy)
Dieting In Pregnancy Could Be Beneficial(02 of08)
Open Image Modal
The common belief that pregnant women can eat for two has been scotched by research suggesting dieting during pregnancy can be beneficial.Experts found that weight management was not only safe but could also reduce complications for pregnant women and be advantageous to the baby.Read the full story here. (credit:Alamy)
Flu Shot In Pregnancy Prevents Stillbirth Risk(03 of08)
Open Image Modal
Canadian research has revealed that mothers who have flu shots during pregnancy reap unexpected health rewards for their babies.Read the full story here. (credit:Alamy)
Do You Think It's Safe To Jog While Pregnant?(04 of08)
Open Image Modal
When six-month pregnant Jenny Wright was called a 'selfish cow' while out for a run in Leeds' Roundhay Park, she assumed she'd misheard.Read the full story here. (credit:Alamy)
Pregnant Dieters More Likely To Have An Obese Child(05 of08)
Open Image Modal
Women who fall pregnant while dieting are more likely to have a child that could become obese or diabetic in later life, new research suggests.Read the full story here. (credit:Alamy)
Why Women Take Two Hours Longer To Give Birth Than Their Grandmothers(06 of08)
Open Image Modal
Pregnant women are spending more time in labour now than 50 years ago, a recent study has discovered.Read the full story here. (credit:Alamy)
1000 Photo Pregnancy Is YouTube Hit(07 of08)
Open Image Modal
Most women probably wish they could get their nine months of pregnancy in four minutes - even if it would leave only a few seconds to decorate the nursery, but at least morning sickness is over in a millisecond.Osher Grencel's pregnancy appears to be happening at the speed of light as husband Tomer took more than 1000 photographs of her in comfy tracksuit bottoms and a white crop top as her pregnant belly grows, morning sickness passes and cribs and prams bought.Read more here.
Eating Unhealthy Food Linked To Lower Birth Weight(08 of08)
Open Image Modal
Eating chips during pregnancy can lead to significant health problems for new born babies, research suggests.Consuming a vast quantity of chips, crisps and biscuits during pregnancy can lead to babies having a lower than average birth weight, the study found.Mothers-to-be who have a high intake of acrylamide - which is found in commonly consumed foods and coffee - are also more likely to have a baby which has a smaller head circumference.Read more here.

But boys born to mothers who drank small amounts during pregnancy were found to have significantly better reading and spatial skills.

The paper concludes that while children born to light drinkers appeared to have more favourable developmental profiles compared to those born to mothers who did not drink during pregnancy, after statistical adjustment these differences largely disappeared.

"In this large, nationally representative study of seven-year-olds,there appeared to be no increased risk of a negative impact of light drinking in pregnancy on behavioural or cognitive development," the authors wrote.

"Prior to statistical adjustment, children born to light drinkers appeared to have more favourable developmental profiles than children whose mothers did not drink during their pregnancies, but, after statistical adjustment,the differences largely disappeared.

"Our findings... support the suggestion that low levels of alcohol consumption during pregnancy are not linked to behavioural or cognitive problems during early to mid-childhood."

Professor Yvonne Kelly, co-author of the study from University College London , said: "There appears to be no increased risk of negative impacts of light drinking in pregnancy on behavioural or cognitive development in seven-year-old children.

"We need to understand more about how children's environments influence their behavioural and intellectual development. While we have followed these children for the first seven years of their lives, further research is needed to detect whether any adverse effects of low levels of alcohol consumption in pregnancy emerge later in childhood."

The Government's advice to women who are pregnant or trying to conceive is that they should avoid alcohol altogether.

But if they choose to drink they should not consumer more than one or two units once or twice a week.