Site icon Women Fitness

‘Don’t drink’ warning for pregnant women

‘Don’t drink’ warning for pregnant women
March 18, 2007

Women will be told not to drink alcohol while pregnant or when trying for a baby, under Government plans to stick warning labels on bottles of booze.

Health ministers have met drinks industry bosses to encourage them to label bottles of wine, spirits and beer with a message of abstinence for mothers-to-be.

The move comes amid fears about women binge-drinking and the risk of brain damage to babies caused by drinking alcohol during pregnancy.

Public health minister Caroline Flint wants the labels to read: ‘Avoid alcohol if you are pregnant or trying to conceive.’

Women are advised by the Department of Health that two units of alcohol – equivalent to a small glass of wine – a day, once or twice a week, is an acceptable amount to drink while pregnant.

But proposals for a total ban on drinking were welcomed by campaigners.

Susan Fleisher, of the National Organisation on Foetal Alcohol Syndrome, said: ‘Because no one can prove what is safe, if you can avoid alcohol we recommend abstaining for nine months.’

The drinks industry is expected to oppose a ban on women drinking, which is set to be introduced later this year in France.

Pregnant women in the US are already banned from drinking.

A spokeswoman for the Department of Health said ‘constructive discussions’ about the warning labels had taken place but insisted any measure would be voluntary for manufacturers.

She added: ‘It is still in its early stages and we wouldn’t consider legislating yet.’

 

Exit mobile version