This is the first study that compares alcohol consumption during pregnancy across 11 European countries. The study uses the same method for collecting data, thereby making the results comparable between the countries.
RESULTS
On average, 16 per cent of women in the 11 European countries reported that they drank alcohol after they knew that they were pregnant.
- The countries with the highest proportion of women who reported alcohol consumption during pregnancy were the UK (28.5 per cent), Russia (26.5 per cent) and Switzerland (20.9 per cent).
- The countries with the lowest proportion of women who reported alcohol consumption were Norway (4.1 per cent), Sweden (7.2 per cent) and Poland (9.7 per cent).
- Women who reported alcohol consumption during pregnancy were more likely to be older, more highly educated, in employment, and had smoked before pregnancy than women who did not report this consumption.
Although the British population in general drink more than Norwegians (ref: Report: Drugs in Norway in 2016, FIG. 2.6.2, p. 30), the study found that countries with a comparable drinking culture to the UK – like Poland and France – had relatively low proportions of women drinking during pregnancy. Therefore, the drinking culture in the overall population may not necessarily apply to those who are pregnant.
“Differences in pregnant women’s drinking behaviour between countries can have many explanations besides variations in willingness of women to provide information about their alcohol consumption during pregnancy. There could be differences in national guidelines or educational campaigns about drinking during pregnancy, differences in prenatal care and attitudes towards alcohol use in pregnancy, or a combination of all these factors,” saysProfessor Hedvig Nordeng from the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, who is the principal investigator of the study in Norway.
Of those women who said they drank alcohol during pregnancy, 39 per cent consumed at least one unit of alcohol per month. Those who drank most frequently (more than one to two units per week) were in Italy (7.8 per cent of the women said they drank during pregnancy) and the UK (2.8 per cent).Those who drank the least (1-2 units during the whole pregnancy) were in Norway and Sweden (over 80 per cent of the women who said they drank during pregnancy) and France, Poland, Finland and Russia (70-80 per cent).Therefore, even though a larger proportion of Russian women continue to drink during pregnancy, compared to the other countries they do not actually drink that much. The women who drink during pregnancy in Italy seem to drink a lot more than the women in the other countries. Again, this may be due to a combination of factors.
Post doc Angela Lupattelli from the University of Oslo, who coordinated the study in Norway and Italy, explains: “We can speculate that both social and cultural factors play a role. Women’s attitudes on the one hand, and national alcohol-related guidelines and policies on the other, may influence women’s drinking behaviour during pregnancy.”
The association between smoking before pregnancy and alcohol use during pregnancy has been observed in earlier research. A plausible explanation for this association is the underlying risk-taking health behaviour among these women. It seems like a paradox that older and more highly educated women were more likely to drink during pregnancy, which also confirms prior research on the topic. This study did not look at the relationship between education and the amount or frequency of drinking during pregnancy.