| 15 Octobre 2013
Experts describe  negative affectivity as the tendency to experience negative emotions  such as anxiety and depression.  Individuals with negative affectivity  tend to have an unfavorable view of themselves and the world in general.   Previous studies have associated negative affectivity with greater  vulnerability to stress, intense emotional reactions to daily life, and  inclination to use intoxicants in response to stress.   Mothers who use alcohol while pregnant place their unborn child at risk  for premature birth, low birthweight, fetal alcohol syndrome and even  fetal death.  These serious health risks have led health experts around  the world to recommend that women abstain from alcohol while trying to  conceive and during pregnancy.  Yet prior evidence indicates that 25% to  50% of women report drinking alcohol while pregnant, with low income  level, partner’s drinking behavior, and mother’s pre-pregnancy alcohol  use all contributing risk factors.   The present population-based study, led by Dr. Kim Stene-Larsen from  the Norwegian Institute of Public Health in Oslo, Norway, used data from  66,111 pregnant women and their partners who were part of the Norwegian  Mother and Child Cohort Study (MoBa).  Mothers filled out surveys  related to alcohol use at 17 and 30 weeks of gestation.  The  Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test-Consumption (AUDIT-C) was used  in the present study to measure light alcohol use (0.5 to 2 units, 1-4  times per month) and binge drinking (intake of 5 alcohol units or more  in a single drinking episode). In Norway one unit of alcohol is  equivalent to “one glass (1/3 liter or ≈11 oz) of beer, one sherry glass  of fortified wine, or one snaps (shot) glass of spirit or liqueur.”  Negative  affectivity was assessed in gestational weeks 17 and 30 using the  Hopkins Symptom Checklist, which measures anxiety and depression.   Medical evidence has established that measures of anxiety and depression  symptoms are comparable to negative affectivity measures.   Findings indicate that with each unit increase in maternal negative  affectivity, the odds for light alcohol increased in the first and  second trimester, 27% and 28%, respectively.   The odds for binge  drinking were much higher at 55% in the first trimester and 114% in the  second trimester for each unit increase of negative affectivity in the  mother.   "Our findings clearly show a link between a mother’s negative  emotions, such as depression and anxiety, and light alcohol use and  binge drinking during pregnancy,” concludes Dr. Stene-Larsen.  “Further  study is needed to understand why women continue to drink alcohol while  pregnant despite health warnings.” 
Researchers  in Norway found that negative affectivity is linked to light alcohol  use and binge drinking during pregnancy.    Results published in  Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica,  a journal of the Nordic Federation of Societies of Obstetrics and  Gynecology, show 16% of women had light alcohol use in the first  trimester and 10% in the second trimester.  Binge drinking occurred in  12% of women during their first trimester and 0.5% in the second  trimester.