Advertisement

CALIFORNIA IN BRIEF : SACRAMENTO : Few Drug-Exposed Babies Receive Help

Share
From Times Staff and Wire Reports

More than 72,000 babies are born in California each year with prenatal exposure to harmful drugs and alcohol, but only about 11% of them are in county programs, state researchers announced. The Senate Office of Research said 25 of the state’s 58 counties reported that 6,358 drug-exposed newborns were referred to county child welfare services in the 1988-89 fiscal year. The counties account for 80% of the state’s births. Only 11% of the estimated 72,000 babies who were exposed to drugs in the womb are being referred to Child Protective Services units, the report found. Ninety-one percent of the counties responding to the survey said cocaine was the drug detected most often in screening tests of high-risk mothers or babies. “Counties are reporting an alarming lack of drug treatment programs for substance-abusing pregnant women and new mothers, posing untold risks for thousands of babies,” said Sen. Diane Watson, the Los Angeles Democrat who requested the survey.

Advertisement