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Prenatal
Marijuana Exposure and Neonatal Outcomes in Jamaica:
An Ethnographic Study
Melanie C. Dreher,
PhD; Kevin Nugent, PhD; and Rebekah Hudgins, MA
Pediatrics,
February 1994, Volume 93, Number 2, pp. 254-260.
American Academy of Pediatrics
From the Schools
of Nursing, Education, and Public Health, the University of Massachusetts,
Amherst.
Received for publication Sep 21, 1992; accepted Jun 30, 1993.
Reprint requests to (M.D.) School of Nursing, the University of Massachusetts,
111 Arnold House, Amherst, MA 01003.
Pediatrics (ISSN 0031 4005). Copyright © 1994 by the American
Academy of Pediatrics.
ABSTRACT.
Objective.
To identify neurobehavioral effects of prenatal marijuana exposure on
neonates in rural Jamaica.
Design.
Ethnographic field studies and standardized neurobehavior assessments
during the neonatal period.
Setting.
Rural Jamaica in heavy-marijuana-using population.
Participants.
Twenty-four Jamaican neonates exposed to marijuana prenatally and 20
nonexposed neonates.
Measurements
and main results. Exposed and nonexposed neonates were compared
at 3 days and 1 month old, using the Brazelton Neonatal Assessment Scale,
including supplementary items to capture possible subtle effects. There
were no significant differences between exposed and nonexposed neonates
on day 3. At 1 month, the exposed neonates showed better physiological
stability and required less examiner facilitation to reach organized
states. The neonates of heavy-marijuana-using mothers had better scores
on autonomic stability, quality of alertness, irritability, and self-regulation
and were judged to be more rewarding for caregivers.
Conclusions.
The absence of any differences between the exposed on nonexposed groups
in the early neonatal period suggest that the better scores of exposed
neonates at 1 month are traceable to the cultural positioning and social
and economic characteristics of mothers using marijuana that select
for the use of marijuana but also promote neonatal development. Pediatrics
1994;93:254-260; prenatal marijuana exposure, neonatal outcomes,
Jamaica, Brazelton scale supplementary items.
ABBREVIATIONS. NBAS,
Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale; SES, Socioeconomic status.
The purpose of
this study was to identify the effects of marijuana (or "ganja" as it
is called in Jamaica) consumption during pregnancy and lactation on
offspring during the neonatal period. Despite the prevalence of marijuana
use among women of childbearing age, 1-3 reports on
the behavioral teratogenic effects of prenatal marijuana exposure have
been conflicting and inconclusive. Fried and Makin, 4
for example, found that moderate levels of marijuana use in their middle-class
Ottawa sample (7.0 joints per week) were associated with poorer habituation
to light, higher levels of irritability, and increased tremors and startles
as assessed by the Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale (NBAS)
between the third and sixth days of life. Tennes et al, 5
on the other hand, found no relationship between exposure to marijuana
and the neonates' behavior as rated by the NBAS. Similarly, a recent
study of 373 lower socioeconomic status (SES) mothers and their neonates
by Richardson and colleagues 6 found no relationship
between moderate levels of marijuana use during pregnancy and neonate
behavior on the NBAS on the second day of life. Yet Chasnoff, 7
lending support to Fried's findings, observed that marijuana use during
pregnancy made a significant contribution to variance in the Brazelton
State Regulation cluster scores, including habituation, in neonates
a few days of age.
More recently,
Coles et al, 8 studied the effects of maternal drug
use on the neurobehavioral status of 107 neonates and found maternal
marijuana use had depressed effects on the Orientation cluster of the
NBAS at 14 days and on the Range of State cluster at the end of the
first month. The interaction of marijuana use and cocaine and alcohol,
however, was responsible for significant amounts of the variance in
neonate behaviors over the first month of life. Nevertheless, they concluded
that although the influence of drug and alcohol exposure could be noted
statistically, the effects on neonate behavior were small and behavior
was not clinically aberrant.
It is likely that
many of conflicting results among published studies on the effects of
prenatal drug exposure are due to methodological problems in (1) the
measurement of neonatal outcomes and (2) the context in which the research
is conducted. With the exception of the analysis of cries of neonates
in Jamaica 9 and the work of Scher et al 10
and Dahl et al 11 that demonstrated altered sleep
cycling and motility among North American neonates, most research has
used the Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale as an outcome
measure in examining the effects of prenatal drug exposure. Inconsistencies
in the use of the scale, however, have included the timing of the administration,
the degree to which examiners were trained to reliability, 12,
13 and the approach to data reduction and analysis.
Perhaps most important, only the 28 neurobehavioral items on the NBAS
have been used in any analysis to date. Although supplementary items
were added to the second edition of the Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral
Assessment Scale 12 to be used with high-risk or fragile
neonates, the items have not yet been employed in any published study
of the effects of in utero drug exposure. This may mean that the more
subtle differences that could distinguish marijuana-exposed neonates
simply may not have emerged in the traditional scoring schemes and neurobehavioral
cluster analysis.
With regard to
the research context, it should be noted that virtually all the studies
of prenatal exposure have been conducted in the United Sates and Canada
where marijuana use is primarily recreational. This is in marked contrast
to other societies, such as Jamaica, where scientific reports have documented
the cultural integration of marijuana and its ritual and medicinal as
well as recreational functions. 14, 15
Previous studies have had difficulty controlling possible confounding
effects of factors such as polydrug use, antenatal care, mothers' nutritional
status, maternal age, SES and social support, as well as the effects
of different caretaking environments, which could lead to differences
in neonate behavior. 8, 16 The legal
and social sanctions associated with illicit drug use often compromise
self-report data and render it almost impossible to obtain accurate
prenatal exposure levels. 17
The Jamaican perinatal
marijuana study provides a unique opportunity to address several of
these methodological issues. First, although the study employed the
NBAS to assure comparability with other studies, it was assumed that
the full-term scale might not be sensitive to less obvious effects of
risk status. Because the effects of marijuana were expected to be subtle,
4 and because the results of studies using the NBAS
to examine the effects of substance abuse on neonatal behavior have
been inconclusive, 6, 8, 16
the new supplementary items were administered to better capture the
more latent effects of maternal marijuana use on neonatal behavior.
In Jamaica the
use of marijuana is culturally integrated and governed by social rules
that guide consumption and distribution and inhibit abuse. 14,
15 Because the cultural meanings that attend marijuana
use and users have been documented to influence the outcomes of consumption,
14, 18 the Jamaican study permits
cross-cultural scrutiny of the concepts and assumptions formulated in
Eurocentric cultures. Also unlike the United States and Canada where
polydrug use prevails, marijuana use by women in Jamaica has been relatively
uncontaminated by other drugs; even alcohol and tobacco are used only
minimally by women. 14, 15, 18,
19 Furthermore, conducting the study in one rural
parish (county) provided an opportunity to compare users and nonusers
who are drawn from the same population in which there is little variation
in such factors as nutrition and prenatal care. Finally, field workers
resided in the communities and developed long-term, trusting relationships
with participants. This enhanced the credibility of self-reports of
consumption and permitted confirmation by direct observations of marijuana-linked
behavior.
Previously reported
findings from this study suggested a biological vulnerability associated
with prenatal exposure to marijuana in the immediate postnatal period.
9 This paper explores the influence of the cultural
context of caregiving by evaluating the infants both at the beginning
and the end of the neonatal period with assessment measures specifically
designed to capture the subtle effects of maternal marijuana use on
neonatal behavior.
CULTURAL
CONTEXT
This project was based
in the southeastern part of Jamaica in which there is a well-known and
documented widespread use of marijuana. 19 Consistent
with the working class throughout Jamaica, residents in the rural communities
from which the sample for this study is drawn view marijuana not only
as a recreational drug but one that also has ritual and medicinal value.
Rastafarians, members of a political-religious movement that endorses
marijuana as a sacred substance, may smoke ritually on a daily basis.
Marijuana also is known for its therapeutic and health-promoting functions.
It is consumed as a tea by family members of all ages for a variety of
illnesses and to maintain and promote health. 14, 15
Although the consumption of marijuana tea transcends class, age, and gender
divisions, marijuana smoking traditionally has been an adult male, working
class activity. 14, 15 The female
marijuana smoker was a rarity and the few women who engaged in smoking
were considered base and undignified and often held in contempt by both
men and women. Instead, women prepared marijuana for themselves and their
families in the form of teas and tonics.
More recently,
however, increasing numbers of women have begun to smoke marijuana regularly.
20 To some extent, this was attributed to the increasing
participation of women in Rastafarianism, but the practice has spread
to nonRastafarian women as well. Not only are such women now grudgingly
tolerated by their communities, many of the heavy-marijuana-users, particularly
if they were Rastafarians, have been given the commendatory title of
"Roots Daughter." Roots Daughters are described as women "with a purpose,"
who can "think, reason and smoke like a man" and who are self-reliant
and dignified. They smoke marijuana on a daily basis, in a manner not
unlike that of their male counterparts, and continue to smoke during
pregnancy and the breast-feeding period.
Although marijuana
use during pregnancy is discouraged in prenatal clinics and through
government-sponsered prevention programs, the consumption of marijuana
during pregnancy by Jamaican women is not necessarily indicative of
a mother's lack of concern about the health and development of her infant.
Supported by the folk belief that marijuana has health-rendering properties
and by the experience of relatives and neighbors, women use it as a
vehicle for dealing with the difficult circumstances surrounding pregnancy
and childbirth. For instance, 19 of the marijuana smokers in the sample
reported that it increased their appetites throughout the prenatal period
and / or relieved the nausea of pregnancy. Fifteen reported using it
to relieve fatigue and provide rest during pregnancy. All the mothers
considered the effects of marijuana on nausea and fatigue to be good
for both themselves and their infants.
The responsibilities
that accompany pregnancy and infant care in an unyielding economic environment
are not trivial. The multigravidas, in particular, reported that the
feelings of depression and desperation attending motherhood in their
impoverished communities were alleviated by both social and private
smoking. Despite these reports of the benefits of marijuana to both
mother and baby, the women who smoke marijuana with any regularity continue
to be in the minority. Most women in Jamaica refrain from smoking the
substance and those who do smoke marijuana represent a departure from
the norms regarding standard female behavior. 20
METHOD
An ethnographic design,
combining community and household naturalistic observations and interviews
of 60 women with standardized testing of their neonates using the NBAS,
was employed. With the assistance of local midwives, the field workers
identified and recruited pregnant women who used marijuana until a sample
of 30 was obtained. After each participant agreed to participate and informed
consent was obtained, she was then matched (again, with the assistance
of local midwives) with a gravid woman who did not use marijuana, according
to age, parity, and SES. The study was fully explained to both the marijuana
users and the companion group and none refused to participate. During
the course of the study, three of the mothers designated as nonusers were
discovered to be tea drinkers and were transferred to the users category,
resulting in a sample of 33 users and 27 nonusers. Further losses to the
sample include two spontaneous abortions in the users category and one
stillbirth and a preterm in the nonuser category, yielding a maternal
sample of 31 users and 25 nonusers. Social, medical, and obstetrical histories
were determined via maternal interviews. Naturalistic observations of
the women in their homes and communities were conducted by the field workers
who maintained routine contact with the participants throughout the prenatal
period. Data concerning labor and delivery and the status of the neonate,
details of labor, any anomalies or complications, birth weight, and length
of gestation were abstracted from hospital records for each birth event.
The sample was
drawn from the vast category of "rural poor," which constitute the majority
of the population of this region of Jamaica. The two groups were matched
for SES, based on income and employment, parity (0 to 8 for both smokers
and nonsmokers) and age . The 60 women ranged in age from 15 to 42 and
all were of Afro-Jamaican descent. None were gainfully employed in permanent
jobs although many worked occasionally outside their homes as agricultural
or domestic laborers or as "higglers" (vendors). Only one of the women
was legally married, although more than half of the women were living
in a more or less permanent common-law arrangement with their infant's
father. Three of the women were members of a Rastafarian sect and lived
in a communal "Rasta Camp." All had regular prenatal care from at least
the second trimester to birth. The use of alcohol and tobacco was minimal
in both groups and did not exceed 3 beers or 15 tobacco cigarettes per
week for any of the women in the study. Based on self reports, reports
of community residents and direct observations by field workers, the
group of marijuana-using mothers was further designated as "light,"
"moderate," or "heavy" users, depending on the frequency the amount
of use. Light users were defined as those women who consumed marijuana
tea only or smoked infrequently, averaging less than 10 cigarettes per
week. Moderate users were those women who smoked 3 or more days a week,
averaging between 11 and 20 marijuana cigarettes. Heavy users smoked
daily, usually more than 21 marijuana cigarettes per week. Many moderate
and heavy users also were regular marijuana tea drinkers. Although it
was not by design, the user group was divided into almost equal categories
of heavy (n = 10), moderate (n = 9), and light (n = 12).
Although the sample
was matched on three major variables, the social histories revealed
subtle and unanticipated differences both within the using group and
between the two groups. First, as a group, the heavy users had the highest
level of education. All the heavy users had had some schooling beyond
the primary school level and three had had some post secondary training.
Although SES was a matching variable in the selection of the sample,
the roots daughters (heavy-marijuana-users) were distinguishable by
the source of support. None relied exclusively on the father of the
study child for support whereas most of the sample was either solely
or heavily dependent on their infant's father. Although none of the
women in the sample was routinely employed, the alternative sources
of income for the roots included their own cash-generating activities
such as running an illegal gambling operation or selling marijuana,
remittances from relatives living abroad, support from parents or from
former mates in the form of cash, food, housing, clothing and/or child
care, and for the three Rastafarian women, housing and food in a communal
living arrangement. The heavy-marijuana-users did not have more income
and status than the other women, but they did have more control over
how they acquired and spent their resources. Closely linked to this
greater economic independence is the lower level of conjugal stability
among users compared with nonusers. Because they did not rely on male
support, they were relatively free to separate and form new relationships
if their current relationship was not to their liking. 21
Among the women using marijuana heavily, only 48% were in common-law
unions compared with 71% of the nonusing women. Among the 10 heavy-marijuana-users,
only 3 lived in more or less permanent, co-residential relationships
with the fathers of their infants. The remaining seven maintained their
own households, although 3 were visited regularly by their infant's
father.
Newborn
Assessments
The newborn assessments
were administered in the hospital on the first and third days and at
1 month of the newborn's life in the hospital maternity ward. To keep
the conditions of birth as comparable as possible, only those newborns
who were born in the hospital and remained there for 3 days were included
in the analysis. Therefore, although the maternal sample was 31 users
and 25 nonusers the newborn sample was reduced to 24 exposed and 20
nonexposed newborns.
The Jamaican examiner,
who was blind to the neonates group assignment, was a registered nurse
who had worked for several years on the maternity unit and was trained
by the Child Development Unit Harvard Medical School both to the .90
reliability criterion and to administer the NBAS supplementary items.
12 Three examination data collection points were used
to embrace the entire neonatal period: 1 day, 3 days, and 1 month. Given
the great disparity within the sample regarding the timing and place
of birth, the day assessments were omitted from the analysis because
of possible differences in recovery time, in keeping with the recommendations
of the NBAS manual. 12 Based on the developmental
assumptions underlying the NBAS, 13 the assessment
of neonate behavior at the end of the first month also can provide a
functional assessment of the effects of the caregiving environment on
neonate behavior. The Brazelton scores at the end of the first month,
therefore, can be interpreted not only in terms of direct marijuana
effects but also as a result of the effects of the environment on behavior.
12
The supplementary
items assess behavior such as the quality of the neonate's attention
or the cost of this level of responsivity to the neonate's physiological
or motor system. The supplementary items also assess the extent of examiner
effort that may be necessary to facilitate the neonate's performance.
This, in turn, may be a critical area that differentiates the fragile
neonate, who has difficulty in coping with the demands of the examination,
from the less stressed, healthy neonate. These additional supplementary
items also identify the threshold of responsivity in neonates and the
degree to which they are vulnerable to external environmental stimulation.
Quality of Alert
Responsiveness is an assessment of the overall capacity of the neonate
to respond to both human and nonhuman stimuli. Cost of Attention describes
the degree to which the neonate's motor, state, and physiological systems
are stressed or compromised as the neonate interacts with the environment.
Examiner Persistence is a measure of the amount of examiner facilitation
that is necessary to enable the neonate to maintain homeostasis or to
be able to respond optimally to the challenges of the examination. General
irritability is an extension of the irritability item in the Scale proper
and describes the overall amount of fussing or crying during the course
of the examination. The Robustness and Endurance item assesses the degree
to which neonates become exhausted or stressed during the course of
the assessment or the extent to which their "energy" resources enable
them to organize or recover in the face of stress. The Regulatory Capacity
score is an index of the strength of the regulatory system and of the
neonate's ability to self-regulate. State Regulation provides a measure
of the range of the neonate's six states and the degree to which the
states are robust and stable and contribute to the overall organization
of the neonate. Balance of Motor Tone Examines the consistency of motor
tone throughout the body and is demonstrated by the balance between
the flexor and extensor motor groups. The final item, Reinforcement
Value of the Infant's Behavior, is a measure of the examiner's reaction
to the neonate and a clinical rating of the degree to which the neonate
was easy or difficult to manage through the course of the examination.
Of these nine items, only Regulation of State and the Cost of Attention
items were not scored. On the basis of the individual item scores, each
subject was assigned a score for each of the seven clusters, and a score
for each of the seven summary supplementary items.
For the analysis
of the NBAS data, the 3-day and 1-month individual scores were reduced
to the seven clusters described by Lester et al. 22
These clusters and the supplementary items were used as dependent measures
in the subsequent analyses. The clusters are Habituation, Orientation,
Motor Organization. Range of State, Regulation of State, Autonomic Regulation,
and the number of Abnormal Reflexes.
The groups were
first dichotomized into marijuana-exposed versus nonexposed and, using
SPSS-X statistical software,The tests were performed to compare the
performance of these neonates on the NBAS clusters and on the supplementary
items. Because the neonates of the heavy users received the most frequent
and consistent exposure both prenatally and during the first month of
life they served as the "extreme" cases in which to search for specific
developmental and behavioral effects. To examine these effects, the
scores of the neonates of heavy-marijuana-using and neonates of nonusing
mothers were also compared using t tests.
RESULTS
The course of the pregnancies
were similar in each group and the two groups of neonates were not significantly
different according to physical examination data, including birth weight
and length and gestational age. 23 Because Apgar scores
were not recorded by hospital nurses at standard time intervals, they
were less reliable. Nevertheless, there were no significant differences
in the Apgar scores between the two groups.
t tests
were used to compare the performance of neonates of users (n = 24) and
nonusers (n = 20 on the NBAS cluster scores and on the supplementary
items on the third day of life. Table 1 shows
that there were no significant differences on the seven clusters. There
also were no differences on the seven supplementary items. To examine
the degree to which heavy marijuana use may have an effect on neurobehavioral
outcome, we then compared the performance of the heavily exposed and
nonexposed neonates on the NBAS on day 3, by examining group differences
on the seven Brazelton cluster scores and on the supplementary items
scores. As Table 2 reveals, there were no significant
differences in performance on the Brazelton cluster scores on day 3.
Similarly, no differences were found on the supplementary item summary
scores.
At 1 month, however,
comparisons between exposed and nonexposed neonates revealed that the
neonates of using mothers had significantly higher scores on the Autonomic
and Reflex clusters of the NBAS (see Table 3).
On the supplementary items, these neonates scored higher (were less
irritable) on the General Irritability item.
Comparing the heavily
exposed and the nonexposed infants, the Brazelton clusters on day 30,
showed that the offspring of heavy-marijuana using mothers had significantly
higher scores on the Orientation cluster, on the Autonomic Stability
cluster, and on Reflexes (see Table 4). Due to
the intercorrelation among the variables comprising each cluster, no
t scores or P values are reported for individual items.
Nevertheless, a comparison of individual item scores showed that neonates
of heavy users had higher scores on habituation to auditory and tactile
stimuli, and to animate auditory stimuli, the degree of alertness, capacity
for consolability, irritability (ie, less irritable), and had fewer
startles and tremors. The comparisons on the supplementary items revealed
significant differences on all seven variables, with the neonates of
mothers who were heavy-marijuana users performing more optimally on
these items.
DISCUSSION
Although no positive
or negative neurobehavioral effects of prenatal exposure were found at
3 days of life using the Brazelton examination, there were significant
differences between the exposed and nonexposed neonates at the end of
the first month. Comparing the two groups, the neonates of mothers who
used marijuana showed better physiological stability at 1 month and required
less examiner facilitation to reach an organized state and become available
for social stimulation. The results of the comparison of neonates of the
heavy-marijuana-using mothers and those of the nonusing mothers were even
more striking. The heavily exposed neonates were more socially responsive
and were more autonomically stable at 30 days than their matched counterparts.
The quality of their alertness was higher; their motor and autonomic systems
were more robust; they were less irritable; they were less likely to demonstrate
any imbalance of tone; they needed less examiner facilitation to become
organized; they had better self-regulation; and were judged to be more
rewarding for caregivers than the neonates of nonusing mothers at 1 month
of age.
TABLE 1. Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale Cluster and Supplementary Scores, Day 3
Users Nonusers t Score
(n = 24) (n = 20)
------------- --------------
Mean SD Mean SD
Habituation 6.83 0.804 6.82 0.835 -.06
Orientation 5.87 0.953 5.45 1.324 -1.10
Motor organization 5.39 0.576 5.42 0.405 0.22
Range of state 4.15 0.415 4.07 0.474 -.57
Regulation of state 5.43 1.163 5.73 0.664 1.06
Autonomic stability 7.59 1.350 7.41 2.020 -.35
Reflexes 15.15 2.240 13.82 3.264 -1.47
Quality of alertness 5.69 1.692 6.05 1.298 0.80
Robustness 7.46 0.811 7.64 1.115 0.59
Regulatory capacity 5.80 1.767 6.00 1.458 0.39
Motor tone 6.76 0.992 6.94 1.249 0.48
General irritability 7.70 0.806 7.75 0.447 0.21
Examiner's persistence 5.42 1.653 5.58 2.002 0.28
Reinforcement value 5.88 1.451 5.94 1.435 0.13
TABLE 2. Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale Cluster and Supplementary Scores, Day 3
Heavy users Nonusers t Score
(n = 10) (n = 20)
------------- --------------
Mean SD Mean SD
Habituation 6.45 0.683 6.82 .835 1.10
Orientation 5.87 0.655 5.45 1.324 -1.05
Motor organization 5.42 0.484 5.42 0.405 0.01
Range of state 4.13 0.427 4.07 0.474 -.31
Regulation of state 5.43 0.836 5.73 0.664 0.93
Autonomic stability 8.13 1.200 7.41 2.020 -1.18
Reflexes 15.66 2.180 13.82 3.264 -1.72
Quality of alertness 5.77 1.856 6.05 1.298 0.40
Robustness 7.22 0.441 7.64 1.115 1.38
Regulatory capacity 5.33 1.871 6.00 1.458 0.93
Motor tone 6.77 1.093 6.94 1.249 0.34
General irritability 7.85 0.378 7.75 0.447 -.59
Examiner's persistence 6.00 1.581 5.58 2.002 -.57
Reinforcement value 5.77 1.716 5.94 1.435 0.24
TABLE 3. Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale Cluster and Supplementary Scores, One Month
Users Nonusers t Score
(n = 24) (n = 20)
------------- --------------
Mean SD Mean SD
Habituation 7.20 0.877 6.53 1.503 -1.50
Orientation 6.63 1.439 6.45 1.310 -.45
Motor organization 6.45 0.669 6.36 .715 -.41
Range of state 3.88 0.748 4.03 .614 0.80
Regulation of state 5.62 1.074 5.47 1.415 -.39
Autonomic stability 8.69 0.549 7.33 2.260 -2.63*
Reflexes 15.55 1.88 13.40 2.990 -2.85*
Quality of alertness 7.28 1.357 6.65 1.496 -1.51
Robustness 8.78 0.499 8.47 .841 -1.45
Regulatory capacity 7.00 1.633 6.15 1.725 -1.72
Motor tone 7.46 1.105 7.50 0.513 0.15
General irritability 8.37 0.565 7.75 0.716 -3.20*
Examiner's persistence 7.25 1.666 6.55 1.877 -1.33
Reinforcement value 7.28 1.512 6.70 1.418 -1.37
* P < (on top of) - (symbol) .01.
Cry changes reported
for this population 9 had suggested a biological vulnerability
24 in the immediate postnatal period that was not evident
in the supplementary item results of this study. A possible explanation
for this discrepancy is that the Brazelton supplementary items, conducted
under more controlled conditions, simply provided a more comprehensive
and reliable assessment of the neonates' neurobehavioral status. It also
is possible that the social effects 25 of the neonate's
cry characteristics may even have elicited a quality of caregiver responses
that could contribute to better outcomes at 1 month. It should be pointed
out that Coles et al 8 also reported more significant
differences at 1 month on the Brazelton Scale clusters than at earlier
assessments, suggesting environmental effects. In this case, the direction
of the differences in performance on the Brazelton examination between
3 days and 1 month suggest not only that the environment may be more influential
than prenatal exposure in predicting outcomes but that the environment
of the exposed group may be superior to that of the nonexposed group.
Conventional wisdom
would suggest that mothers who are long-term marijuana users are less
likely to create optimal caregiving environments for their neonates.
In this area of rural Jamaica, however, where marijuana is culturally
integrated, and where heavy use of the substance by women is associated
with a higher level of education and greater financial independence,
it seems that roots daughters have the capacity to create a postnatal
environment that is supportive of neonatal development. Indeed, Pearson's
correlations, performed determine whether there was an association between
the mother's education and neonatal outcomes at 1 month, revealed that
maternal education was significantly correlated with the Autonomic cluster
at 1 month (r = .27, P = .031) and approached significance
with all the supplementary items.
Although it is
tempting to explain the 1-month outcomes by simply appealing to the
correlation evidence linking performance to maternal characteristics,
the question remains as to how these characteristics are translated
to the formation of a better environment for neonatal development, particularly
given the higher level of conjugal instability among users. Ethnographic
observations of the postnatal environments identified that, despite
the higher level of single mother households among the users, they had
fewer children at home and thus fewer child care responsibilities compared
with their nonusing counterparts. They also had more adults living in
their households. Pearson's correlations revealed that the household
child / adult ratio was significantly correlated with the Habituation
clusters at 1 month (P = .046, r = .30) and with later
child development outcomes. 21 Although the exact
mechanism linking child / adult ratio to 1 month outcomes requires further
delineation, it is possible that with more adults present to assist
the mother and respond to the neonate and / or with fewer children to
compete for attention, the mother is better equipped to facilitate the
neonate's interaction with his / her environment. The lower child /
adult household ratios and the mother's characteristics are not unrelated.
The dispersal or outplacement of older children to their respective
father's households as a new child is brought in is a common practice,
facilitated by the pattern of serial mating in which the using mothers
are more likely to engage. Thus, in this Jamaican rural working class
context, conjugal instability is associated with greater rather than
diminished access to the resources that influence child development.
TABLE 4. Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale Cluster and Supplementary Scores, One Month
Heavy users Nonusers t Score
(n = 10) (n = 20)
------------- --------------
Mean SD Mean SD
Habituation 6.75 1.521 6.53 1.503 -.22
Orientation 7.40 0.457 6.45 1.310 -2.87+
Motor organization 6.33 0.374 6.36 0.715 0.16
Range of state 3.41 0.984 4.03 0.614 1.75
Regulation of state 6.20 1.007 5.47 1.415 -1.57
Autonomic stability 9.00 0 7.33 2.260 -3.30+
Reflexes 15.78 2.220 13.40 2.990 -2.38*
Quality of alertness 8.00 0.500 6.65 1.496 -3.61+
Robustness 9.00 0.000 8.47 .841 -2.73+
Regulatory capacity 7.77 1.093 6.15 1.725 -3.07+
Motor tone 7.88 0.333 7.50 .513 -2.44*
General irritability 8.75 0.463 7.75 .716 -4.37+
Examiner's persistence 8.33 0.707 6.55 1.877 -3.70+
Reinforcement value 8.00 0.707 6.70 1.418 -3.29+
* P < (on top of) - (symbol) .03.
+ P < (on top of) - (symbol) .01.
Cross-societal research
14, 15, 26 has
identified the importance of understanding the cultural context of drug
use to explain outcomes. Whether or not the effects of marijuana during
the prenatal period are real or only perceived, it is clear that for
them, it has at least symbolic value in assisting them through the physical,
social, and psychological difficulties of pregnancy and the postnatal
experience. Furthermore, unlike the United States, in which heavy marijuana
use often is associated with maternal incompetence and a suboptimal
caregiving environment, the data from this study indicate that in Jamaica,
the heavy-marijuana-using mother's education, independence, and greater
access to resources converge in a constellation of maternal competence
and a supportive context for neonatal development.
Strengths
and Limitations
It should be noted
that there are several limitations posed by this study and caution must
be used in interpreting the results. First, the means by which the study
participants were recruited may have introduced a bias in the sample.
Second, the sample size is small, obviating the use statistical procedures
that might be able to account for the many environmental variables that
seem to influence some of the outcomes. Third, in a prospective study
of this nature it is impossible to foresee and control for all the potential
environmental and maternal confounders. Finally, this study has not
eliminated alternative explanations. It is possible for example, that
the outcomes at 1 month are related to neonatal exposure to marijuana
constituents via breast milk or to prenatal influences that simply were
not manifested at the 3-day examination.
On the other hand,
the prospective design, using ethnographic techniques and inductive
analyses, offers several advantages to the exploration of prenatal exposure
to illicit drugs. First, given the difficulties encountered in recruiting
participants who are engaging in an illegal activity and then retrieving
credible data from them, identification by fieldworkers, with assistance
from local midwives, represented a contributive alternative to a random
sampling strategy. Second, although the sample size is small, it provided
an opportunity to follow up drug-using women through pregnancy with
the level of detail that often is lacking in retrospective studies of
large numbers of women. Finally, the effects of prenatal exposure to
drugs such as marijuana depend on several factors for which it is difficult
and sometimes impossible to control in most clinical investigations.
8 Although this study was successful in controlling
for polydrug use and SES, other variables (financial independence, mothers
education, and household child / adult ratio) emerged as meaningful
during the course of this study. Indeed a strength of the inductive
design is its capacity to identify such unanticipated variables and
to understand how they are linked in Jamaican culture with heavy marijuana
use and a roots daughter syndrome. Although some might interpret this
failure to identify the relevant variables at the outset of the study
and control for them in a more experimental design as a weakness of
the study, one could argue, conversely, that the project's greatest
value is its capacity for discovery and the generation of hypotheses
and research questions that can be explored in subsequent studies.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This work was supported by the March of Dimes Foundation.
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