news

These startling images show the real effects of smoking while pregnant.

These images should be enough to encourage any expectant mum to put the cigarettes down.

Doctors have long warned that smoking while pregnant is bad for your baby’s development — but until now, we’ve never seen images showing just what that harm looks like on unborn babies.

And experts are hoping the scans will encourage mums struggling to put the cigarettes down and quit smoking.

In the image below, the baby featured at the top is the foetus of a smoking mother, while the baby on the bottom is that of a non-smoking mum.

 

According to Dr Nadja Reissland, who conducted the research at Durham University, babies should touch their face and mouth less the further along they develop.

These images show that cigarettes can delay the development of the baby’s central nervous system.

Read more: WATCH: Here’s how far behind Australia the rest of the world is on tobacco.

Dr Reissland monitored 20 pregnant women attending James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough using 4-D ultrasound scan images to record movements of babies in the womb at 24, 28, 32 and 36 weeks.

Four of the mothers smoked an average of 14 cigarettes a day.

The study concluded that foetuses of smoking mothers showed significantly higher rates of mouth movement and self-touching than those of non-smoking mums.

Read more: Mothers and midwives weigh in: Your biggest fears about childbirth eased.

Doctors warn that smoking while pregnant is the biggest contributing factor to development of complications during pregnancy. It can lead to asthma, middle ear disease, poor lung development, respiratory problems, behavioural issues and even cot death.

Listen to Dr Reissland explain her findings below…

Related Stories

Recommended

Top Comments

Laura Palmer 10 years ago

I have friends who smoked during pregnancy and their kids are ALWAYS sick. With chest infections, ear problems, gut problems, you name it. Much more so than the kids I know who's mothers didn't smoke, or my own children, who were grown in a smoke-free environment.

I did let my friends know how I felt, it made me a bit sick to watch them drag on a ciggie with a baby in their belly, but it made no difference. They continued to smoke like chimneys. Their kids do pay for it. Every winter.


Jo 10 years ago

Way back in 1972/73 when I was a few weeks pregnant with my daughter, there was an ad on TV that showed an invitro baby 'gasping' as the mother dragged on a cigarette. It shocked me enough to stop smoking and until this day I have never smoked again. These pictures don't seem to shock me as much.