By NICKY CHAMP
I was in London watching the news when it happened. A giant lump that refused to be swallowed hardened in my throat. A newsreader said the words ‘Drinking alcohol while pregnant could soon be illegal,’ and my stomach dropped. That all-too-familiar mother guilt settled in. Oh God, I thought, just last week I drank two glasses of champagne. I’m 19 weeks pregnant.
The reason why we’re talking about the possible legalities of drinking while pregnant is because a mother in the UK is facing a compensation claim for “excessive drinking” while pregnant. Her now seven-year-old daughter known only as ‘CP’ was born with Foetal Alcohol Syndrome and now suffers from “growth-retardation” as a direct result of her mother’s drinking.
She is no longer in her mother’s care and it’s her adopted parents who are seeking compensation.
The mother in question didn’t just drink a few glasses of wine a week; the court documents described her alcohol intake as “half a bottle of vodka and eight cans of strong lager a day”.
And worst of all was that she “was aware of the dangers to her baby of her excessive consumption during pregnancy”.
The case has drawn interest from the public because any precedent set could pave the way for pregnant women’s behaviour to be criminalised.
Top Comments
What a very silly article it's one thing to ban cigarettes, drugs and alcohol whilst pregnant But comparing it to soft cheese & hard boiled eggs? Really?
For a start as an Australian website you should know that it's ILLEGAL to sell cheese that is unpasteurised in our local supermarkets. Only 15% of the cheese sold in Australia is unpasteurised and they are sold at gourmet cheese shops (who have a licence to do so and have to advice the buyer of the cheese status) and 5 star restaurants who also have to indicate the status of the cheese. So going to Woolworths and eating some "soft" cheese doesn't count. In fact my OB told me the whole don't eat cheese rule is obsolete in Australia due to our tough policy on unpasteurised milk.
Also if you eat a hard boiled egg that's fresh and just been cooked that doesn't count either. It's only hard boiled egg that's been left to sit for hours at a time.
Soft boiled eggs, not hard. The yoke is uncooked.
What riles me up are idiots like this author who compare effects of drinking and smoking to eating suchi and cheese!! If you can't give up alcohol and smokes for the 9 months for the sake of your child knowing very well it each smoke damages your child, why do you bother to become a mother?