'Crack baby' study ends with unexpected but clear result

By Susan FitzGerald, For The InquirerPosted: July 21, 2013






Jaimee Drakewood hurried in from the rain, eager to get to her final 
appointment at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
Ever since her birth 23 years ago, a team of researchers has been tracking 
every aspect of her development - gauging her progress as an infant, 
measuring her IQ as a prechooler, even peering into her adolescent brain using 
an MRI machine.
Now, after nearly a quarter century, the 
federally funded study was ending, and the question the researchers had 
been asking was answered.
Did cocaine harm the long-term development of children like Jaimee, who were 
exposed to the drug in their mother's womb?
The researchers had expected the answer would be a resounding yes. But it 
wasn't. Another factor would prove far more critical.
A crack epidemic was raging in Philadelphia in 1989 when Hallam Hurt, 
then chair of neonatology at Albert Einstein Medical Center on North 
Broad Street, began a study to evaluate the effects of in-utero cocaine 
exposure on babies. In maternity wards in Philadelphia and elsewhere, 
caregivers were seeing more mothers hooked on cheap, smokable crack 
cocaine. A 1989 study in Philadelphia found that nearly one in six 
newborns at city hospitals had mothers who tested positive for cocaine.
Troubling stories were circulating about the so-called crack babies. They had 
small heads and were easily agitated and prone to tremors and bad muscle tone, 
according to reports, many of which were anecdotal. Worse, the 
babies seemed aloof and avoided eye contact. Some social workers 
predicted a lost generation - kids with a host of learning and emotional 
deficits who would overwhelm school systems and not be able to hold a 
job or form meaningful relationships. The "crack baby" image became 
symbolic of bad mothering, and some cocaine-using mothers had their 
babies taken from them or, in a few cases, were arrested.
It was 
amid that climate that Hurt organized a study of 224 near-term or 
full-term babies born at Einstein between 1989 and 1992 - half with 
mothers who used cocaine during pregnancy and half who were not exposed 
to the drug in utero. All the babies came from low-income families, and 
nearly all were African Americans.
Hurt hoped the study would 
inform doctors and nurses caring for cocaine-exposed babies and even 
guide policies for drug prevention, treatment, and follow-up 
interventions. But she never anticipated that the study, funded by the 
National Institute on Drug Abuse, would become one of the largest and 
longest-running studies of in-utero cocaine exposure.
One mother 
who signed up was Jaimee's mom, Karen Drakewood. She was on an all-night crack 
binge in a drug house near her home in the city's West Oak Lane 
section when she went into labor. Jaimee was born Jan. 13, 1990, 
weighing an even 7 pounds.
"Jaimee was beautiful when she was 
born. A head full of hair. She looked like a porcelain doll," Karen 
Drakewood, now 51, said recently in her Overbrook kitchen. "She was 
perfect."
But Drakewood knew looks could be deceiving.
"My 
worst fear was that Jaimee would be slow, mentally retarded, or 
something like that because of me doing drugs," she said. She agreed to 
enroll her baby in the cocaine study at Einstein. Drakewood promised 
herself that she would turn her life around for the sake of Jaimee and 
her older daughter, but she soon went back to smoking crack.
Hurt arrived early at Children's Hospital one morning in June to give a talk on 
her team's findings to coworkers. After nearly 25 years of studying 
the effects of cocaine and publishing or presenting dozens of findings, 
it wasn't easy to summarize it in a PowerPoint presentation. The study 
received nearly $7.9 million in federal funding over the years, as well 
as $130,000 from the Einstein Society.
Hurt, who had taken her 
team from Einstein to Children's in 2003, began her lecture with 
quotations from the media around the time the study began. A social 
worker on TV predicted that a crack baby would grow up to "have an IQ of 
perhaps 50." A print article quoted a psychologist as saying "crack was 
interfering with the central core of what it is to be human," and yet 
another article predicted that crack babies were "doomed to a life of 
uncertain suffering, of probable deviance, of permanent inferiority."
Hurt, who is also a professor of pediatrics at the University of 
Pennsylvania, is always quick to point out that cocaine can have 
devastating effects on pregnancy. The drug can cause a problematic rise 
in a pregnant woman's blood pressure, trigger premature labor, and may 
be linked to a dangerous condition in which the placenta tears away from the 
uterine wall. Babies born prematurely, no matter the cause, are at 
risk for a host of medical and developmental problems. On top of that, a 
parent's drug use can create a chaotic home life for a child.
Hurt's study enrolled only full-term babies so the possible effects of 
prematurity did not skew the results. The babies were then evaluated 
periodically, beginning at six months and then every six or 12 months on 
through young adulthood. Their mothers agreed to be tested for drug use 
throughout the study.
The researchers consistently found no 
significant differences between the cocaine-exposed children and the 
controls. At age 4, for instance, the average IQ of the cocaine-exposed 
children was 79.0 and the average IQ for the nonexposed children was 
81.9. Both numbers are well below the average of 90 to 109 for U.S. 
children in the same age group. When it came to school readiness at age 
6, about 25 percent of children in each group scored in the abnormal 
range on tests for math and letter and word recognition.
"We went 
looking for the effects of cocaine," Hurt said. But after a time "we 
began to ask, 'Was there something else going on?' "
While the 
cocaine-exposed children and a group of nonexposed controls performed 
about the same on tests, both groups lagged on developmental and 
intellectual measures compared to the norm. Hurt and her team began to 
think the "something else" was poverty.
As the children grew, the 
researchers did many evaluations to tease out environmental factors that could 
be affecting their development. On the upside, they found that 
children being raised in a nurturing home - measured by such factors as 
caregiver warmth and affection and language stimulation - were doing 
better than kids in a less nurturing home. On the downside, they found 
that 81 percent of the children had seen someone arrested; 74 percent 
had heard gunshots; 35 percent had seen someone get shot; and 19 percent had 
seen a dead body outside - and the kids were only 7 years old at 
the time. Those children who reported a high exposure to violence were 
likelier to show signs of depression and anxiety and to have lower 
self-esteem.
More recently, the team did MRI scans on the 
participants' brains. Some research has suggested that gestational 
cocaine exposure can affect brain development, especially the dopamine 
system, which in turn can harm cognitive function. An area of concern is 
"executive functioning," a set of skills involved in planning, 
problem-solving, and working memory.
The investigators found one 
brain area linked to attention skills that differed between exposed and 
nonexposed children, but they could not find any clinically significant 
effect on behavioral tests of attention skills.
Drug use did not 
differ between the exposed and nonexposed participants as young adults. 
About 42 percent used marijuana and three tested positive for cocaine 
one time each.
The team has kept tabs on 110 of the 224 children 
originally in the study. Of the 110, two are dead - one shot in a bar 
and another in a drive-by shooting - three are in prison, six graduated 
from college, and six more are on track to graduate. There have been 60 
children born to the 110 participants.
The years of tracking kids have led Hurt to a conclusion she didn't see coming.
"Poverty is a more powerful influence on the outcome of inner-city children 
than gestational exposure to cocaine," Hurt said at her May lecture.
Other researchers also couldn't find any devastating effects from cocaine 
exposure in the womb. Claire Coles, a psychiatry professor at Emory 
University, has been tracking a group of low-income Atlanta children. 
Her work has found that cocaine exposure does not seem to affect 
children's overall cognition and school performance, but some evidence 
suggests that these children are less able to regulate their reactions 
to stressful stimuli, which could affect learning and emotional health.
Coles said her research had found nothing to back up predictions that 
cocaine-exposed babies were doomed for life. "As a society we say, 
'Cocaine is bad and therefore it must cause damage to babies,' " Coles 
said. "When you have a myth, it tends to linger for a long time."
Deborah A. Frank, a pediatrics professor at Boston University who has tracked a 
similar group of children, said the "crack baby" label led to erroneous 
stereotyping. "You can't walk into a classroom and tell this kid was 
exposed and this kid was not," Frank said. "Unfortunately, there are so 
many factors that affect poor kids. They have to deal with so much 
stress and deprivation. We have also found that exposure to violence is a huge 
factor."
Frank said that cocaine - along with other illicit 
drugs, alcohol, and cigarettes - "isn't good for babies," but the belief that 
they would "grow up to be addicts and criminals is not true. Some 
kids have stunned us with how well they've done."
Jaimee Drakewood came to her last visit at Children's with her 16-month-old 
son KyMani in tow. It was the 31st time she had met with the 
researchers.
"We do appreciate everything you've done, because 
it's not easy to get to all these appointments," said team member 
Kathleen Dooley, as she handed Drakewood a framed certificate of 
appreciation. "We are proud of you and we feel you are family, because 
you are."
The team plans to stay in touch with study participants 
each year. They have started a new study that uses MRI and other tools 
to explore the neural and cognitive effects of poverty on infant 
development.
"Given what we learned," Hurt said, "we are invested 
in better understanding the effects of poverty. How can early effects be 
detected? Which developing systems are affected? And most important, 
how can findings inform interventions for our children?"
The team 
considers Jaimee and her mother, Karen, among their best success 
stories. Jaimee is heading into her senior year at Tuskegee University 
in Alabama and hopes to become a food inspector. She is home for the 
summer with her son and working as a lifeguard at a city pool.
After a few starts and stops, including a year in jail, Karen Drakewood is 
off drugs and works as a residential adviser at Gaudenzia House. Her 
older daughter just received a master's degree at Drexel University; her son is 
a student at Florida Atlantic University. Even in the worst 
moments, Karen Drakewood said she tried to show her kids "what their 
future could hold." "If a child sees the light, they will follow it."
Jaimee Drakewood credits her big sister and mother for keeping her on track. 
"I've seen my mom at her lowest point and I've seen her at her highest. 
That hasn't stopped me from seeing the superwoman in her regardless of 
where she was at," Jaimee said.
Despite her family's history, 
Jaimee believes she and her siblings are "destined to have 
accomplishments, to be greater than our parents."
________________________________
 
Susan FitzGerald, a former Inquirer reporter, has written periodically about 
the cocaine study. Now an independent journalist, she is coathor of a 
parenting book, Letting Go With Love and Confidence and can be reached 
at [email protected] .

http://articles.philly.com/2013-07-21/news/40709969_1_hallam-hurt-so-called-crack-babies-funded-study


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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