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Alcohol and pregnancy

Alcohol and pregnancy

Levels

There is no known safe level of alcohol use in pregnancy, so stopping completely is best. If you are planning a pregnancy you need to know that:

Cutting down or stopping alcohol while trying to get pregnant protects your baby.

Continuing to drink, even in small amounts, when you are pregnant puts your baby at risk. The more you drink the greater the amount that is passed on to your baby.


Foetal alcohol syndrome

Drinking alcohol in the first trimester can cause foetal alcohol syndrome, resulting in serious problems for the development of your baby, and all their organs. Your baby's brain develops throughout the whole pregnancy, drinking in the second and third trimesters can cause Alcohol Related Neurodevelopmental Disorder, particularly as the biggest spurt of brain growth happens in the final trimester, and then continues on until the child is two years of age. 

The effects of drinking alcohol during pregnancy may not be seen until your child is a few years old. Children exposed alcohol during pregnancy often show poor attention and hyperactivity.

Information leaflet

The country’s three largest maternity hospitals have joined with Alcohol Action Ireland, the national charity for alcohol-related issues, to warn of the damage that can be caused to the unborn child by drinking alcohol during pregnancy.

The dangers of drinking during pregnancy and advice for prospective mothers is outlined in a new information leaflet.

Download the information leaflet

 

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