An increased reliance on prescription painkillers and the resulting addiction has now shown up in the most vulnerable patients â" America's newborns, according to a report released Monday.
Addicted babies â" many suffering from respiratory problems, low birth weight and seizures â" have nearly tripled in less than a decade.
That's one baby every hour in the U.S., according to the study in the Journal of the American Medical Association, said Stephen Patrick, lead author and a doctor at the University of Michigan Medical Center's Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.
Meanwhile, the number of mothers using opiates has increased fivefold, according to the same study.
It's also a burden on public health dollars â" and a wake-up call about the need for better prevention, Patrick said.
Average costs to care for the babies suffering from neonatal abstinence syndrome, or NAS, skyrocketed to $53,400 from $39,400 in the same time period, 2000 to 2009, according to the study.
In addition to seizures and breathing problems, NAS is marked by low birth weight, irritability, muscle cramping, tremors, feeding problems, vomiting and watery stools.
"Generally, babies are soothed by wrapping or holding or being fed," Patrick said. "Typically, these babies can't be consoled."
Babies were in the hospital for an average of 16 days, and 78 percent were covered by Medicaid.
The source of their mother's addiction? The study doesn't address why the mothers were using drugs, nor did it explore what specific drugs they used, though NAS is most commonly linked to opiates, according to the study.
Dr. Carl Christensen, who runs the Eleanor Hutzel Recovery Center in Detroit, said he sees it all the time: Doctors who too easily prescribe painkillers, and patients who demand them.
The clinic treats more than 100 addicted moms-to-be a year, said Christensen, who is also an associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Wayne State University in Detroit.
Most women were prescribed Vicodin and OxyContin to manage pain from injury or disease, Christensen said.
"A lot of patients ⦠feel they don't have an addiction as long as they can get their prescription filled," he said.
"A lot of them say, 'I have pain, and as long as I have pain, I should be able to take medicine.'"
The increase in use began more than a decade ago when, in addition to considering temperature, pulse, respirations and blood pressure, doctors began to focus on pain and its management, said Dr. Philip Gilly, medical director at Henry Ford Health System's Maplegrove Center.
"I think narcotics are used for things more often ⦠and it's socially acceptable," Gilly said.
"The people who are predisposed to addiction are exposed to narcotics more often than they used to be."
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