Ethn
Dis 1996 Winter-Spring;6(1-2):47-55
Racism and perinatal addiction.
Neuspiel DR.
Department of Pediatrics, Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore
Medical Center, Bronx, New York, USA.
Recent publicity and policy have targeted drug use by non-white women,
particularly during pregnancy and parenthood. This emphasis on women of
color is discordant with the population demographics of substance use
and addiction, although morbidity and mortality related to drugs is often
greater among nonwhites. Women with addictive disorders that are exacerbated
by their social environments are blamed for their behavior. Meanwhile,
drug treatment and primary health care services for these women are woefully
inadequate. Among newborns testing positive for cocaine, those with black
mothers are more likely to be discharged to non-maternal care, which may
perpetuate family disruption. There are multiple reasons for true and
perceived ethnic differences in substance use, addiction, and related
social and medical harm. Such harm may be worsened by the racism inherent
in U.S. drug policy. The scapegoating of non-white drug-using women and
the paucity of treatment for them may be related to political and economic
imperatives of society in maintaining and pacifying exploited groups.
Publication Types: Review; Review Literature
PMID: 8882835 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]