It is well documented that the use of tobacco and alcohol during pregnancy is associated with a number of adverse general intents on the growth.
It is well documented that the use of tobacco and alcohol during pregnancy is associated with a number of adverse general intents on the growth, cognitive evolution and behavior of the expos child. Despite this fact, many women continue to sooty vapor and drink during pregnancy. Dr Marie D Cornelius and Nancy L Day describe the prevalence of alcohol and tobacco use during pregnancy and review findings forward the effects of maternal smoking during pregnancy as well as the weights of prenatal and postnatal position to "secondhand" smoke. Understanding the imports of prenatal tobacco exposure allows researchers to identify those characteristics that are uniquely related to tobacco and those that are affected by means of alcohol exposure. This research, along with research onward the effects of alcohol use during pregnancy, has implications for preventing various originals of substance use during pregnancy and for treating children affected from prenatal substance use. (pp. 242-249)