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- Title
Risk related to abuse of drugs in pregnant women.
- Authors
de Souza Santos, Rubia Mariana; Gavioli, Aroldo
- Abstract
Objective: to evaluate the risk related to drug use among pregnant women. Methods: this is a cross-sectional study, conducted with 209 pregnant women who answered the questionnaire for sociodemographic characterization and the Alcohol, Smoking, and Substance Involvement Screening Test. Descriptive and multivariate statistics were used. Results: there were 18.1% of the pregnant women with a moderate and high-risk level related to tobacco consumption, 27.2% with alcohol and 1.9% with marijuana. Levels of risk were statistically associated with less than eight years of non-white, Catholic education, living with a family of drug users, with a lower income than the sample mean, without children, living in a non-family household and aged between 14 and 24 years old. Conclusion: risk levels related to tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana consumption were high, being presented in vulnerable groups that should be the target of public policies for health promotion and prevention of drug use among pregnant women.
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse prevention; SUBSTANCE abuse risk factors; SMOKING; CATHOLIC Church; CONFIDENCE intervals; HEALTH promotion; MULTIVARIATE analysis; PREGNANT women; QUESTIONNAIRES; MATHEMATICAL variables; MULTIPLE regression analysis; SOCIOECONOMIC factors; CROSS-sectional method; DATA analysis software; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; ODDS ratio
- Publication
Rev Rene, 2017, Vol 18, Issue 1, p35
- ISSN
1517-3852
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.15253/2175-6783.2017000100006