There was another warning
about cocaine today.
Crack now has spread through
almost every American city.
It is a problem in Houston, Philadelphia,
Kansas City, Tucson, and Sacramento.
In the 1980s, the media sounded the alarm
that a new drug, crack cocaine,
was taking over American cities
and that it had an especially devastating
effect
on pregnant women and their newborns.
A new study says that babies born to women
who use cocaine during pregnancy
are three times as likely to be born
with birth defects.
They tend to be, what we call jittery.
There are very very high risk
for Cerebral Palsy... Mental retardation.
They are prone to hypertension, strokes,
and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome.
These children were the most expensive
babies ever born in America.
are going to overwhelm every social
service delivery system
that they come in contact with
throughout the rest of their lives.
Drugs take away the dream from
every child's heart,
and replaces it with a nightmare.
But were these infants really doomed?
Nearly three decades later, what is
the true legacy of the crack baby era?
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In the early 1980s, Dr. Ira Chaznoff,
a young researcher
at North Western Memorial Hospital
in Chicago
decided to study what
he saw as a worrisome trend
among his pregnant patients,
who had used cocaine.
Women were coming in and their babies
were looking different when they were born
they had higher rates of pre-maturity.
And, they had higher rates of newborn
seizures and other complications.
A lot of the babies exposed to the cocaine
are quite small.
We think that that's related to the use
of this drug during pregnancy.
We'd seen effects of alcohol and other
substances on children
so we were certainly open to the idea
that this was a problem.
Cocaine was an epidemic.
I think that it was something
that the media --
It became an exciting thing to talk about.
What you got? What you need? What you got?
We call our broadcast, "48 Hours
on Crack Street".
Soon after our paper was published, within
days we were getting calls from media
all over the country
and started hearing the term
"crack babies".
Spotlight tonight, our investigative
series on cocaine kids.
Despite all the warnings a growing number
of babies are being born
already addicted to cocaine.
As it got out into the world,
it became this phenomenon.
Twenty three babies were born
to the cocaine using women in this study.
Because the problem has appeared
so suddenly,
there are few reliable statistics.
The number of so called cocaine babies,
is growing at an astonishing rate.
The number of babies born addicted
has risen more than 500%.
I had lots of people interviewing me.
Dr. Ira Chaznoff, of Chicago's
North Western Memorial Hospital
runs the oldest program researching
cocaine and the newborn.
It appears that cocaine has just
as devastating effect on pregnancy,
and the new born, as heroin.
Chaznoff told reporters that cocaine
exposure was causing some babies
to be born with brain damage.
And that others were overwhelmed by even
simple eye contact with the mother.
These children are not normal
in the sense that
they are going to be able
to enter the classic school room
and function in large groups of children.
Other researchers and doctors echo
Chaznoff's conclusions
and a host of seemingly recognizable
symptoms took hold.
One of the things that we see about
babies who have been exposed to cocaine
is they tend to be very tremulous
and shaky.
Very fine kinds of tremors.
We look to see if we would find
the effects that were reported.
And we were saying,
"Well...we aren't seeing this."
As Chaznoff's star rose, Dr. Clair Kholes
was reaching a different
though equally startling conclusion
about crack babies
based on her study of infant behavior
at Emory University.
The effects didn't seem consistent
with the action of the drug itself.
Many of the children, who are
the so-called classic cocaine babies,
were premature babies.
And the symptoms that were seen
on the videos, on television.
the tremoring arms and all of that,
that was prematurity.
You could have taken any premature baby
and gotten the same image.
I think that people got very focused
on cocaine is the cause of this
rather than thinking, substance abuse
is the cause of this,
maternal lifestyle is the cause of this,
social issues are the cause of this.
But Khole's findings didn't fit within
the narrative of what had become
a national scare.
Cocaine.. Crack.
If you use drugs while you are pregnant,
your baby can die.
There's a whole lot of people
who feel that if you can just scare people
sufficiently about something
that that's better than actually telling
them the truth about something
because that'll prevent them
from doing bad things.
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(door crashing) Police!
The American Agenda tonight
poses this question:
What would you do about pregnant women
who use drugs
and pass those drugs on to their babies?
By the late 1980s, Chaznoff's findings
were being used to justify cases
charging pregnant cocaine users as child
abusers, drug dealers, and killers.
I was at first stunned.
And then angry, that they would
distort the information.
That's when I started realizing how
a lot of this can be taken out of context
and used to bolster any kind of argument.
People may have felt that
they were doing the right thing.
But I mean the idea that one
would prosecute a pregnant women
and use this kind of,
not very accurate research,
to do so is very disturbing.
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As the prosecutions continued,
crack babies grew to toddlers.
No one knows how many there are,
or even how to best identify them.
But educators suspect that tens
of thousands of crack kids
are in kindergartens in inner cities
in suburbia, even in small town America.
It now threatens to create an entirely
new underclass of children,
unable to care for themselves,
of infants born to suffer.
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In the United States this year,
at least a hundred thousand crack babies
will be born.
Today the government said it will cost
5 billion dollars a year
to care for such babies.
And money doesn't begin
to tell the whole story.
I'm supposed to be a victim
of that crack era.
I was supposed to be disruptive,
mentally unstable.
I wasn't supposed to reach the point
where I am now.
The initial hypothesis was
that drug abuse
will lead to huge physical deformities,
huge mental deformities in children.
And, you know, in myself, I didn't see
any of those things.
So, it would be easy for me to believe
that, that science doesn't hold true.
Almost three decades since Chaznoff's
initial research,
which focused on just twenty three babies,
long term studies have found only subtle
changes
in the brains of cocaine exposed
research subjects like Stone.
There is no particular evidence of
this social, emotional deficit.
You're not seeing really broad scale
severe developmental problems
as was predicted.
The schools have not been overwhelmed
by the flood of cocaine exposed children.
In fact, Stone became the first in her
family to graduate from college.
In learning that I had been exposed,
I kinda told myself
I am not going to make this an issue.
Whatever I have to do to get around
what the effects may be, I'll do that.
The paper was a very preliminary
kind of finding.
And it really shouldn't have been
generalized, to the extent it was.
Which I believe Dr. Chaznoff eventually
came to himself and said
that he felt that this didn't really
represent the whole of the situation.
Doctor let's go to you on this question.
You've studied this, perhaps
one of the first people to study this.
How does cocaine use effect newborns?
Well there's no questions that cocaine
use during pregnancy
has some real effects on the unborn,
and on the newborn child.
But, these effects are not devastating,
and can be addressed through treatment
for the pregnant woman and for the child.
Over time, Chaznoff did distance himself
from some of the extreme pronouncements
he was quoted as making in the early days.
I probably talked too much,
or gave long winded explanations.
Which were completely cut out.
It was one of those feelings where
you just feel completely out of control.
But the hysteria that followed his initial
research had already taken its toll.
It wasn't even a natural
disaster or a war.
It was a drug that caused so much harm
among my generation and my parent's
generation.
Certainly cocaine was contributing
to this problem,
but, they got very focused on it
as the only sole cause of it.
I think people still believe
the cocaine story,
but alcohol is much more
of a problem than cocaine.
Because there is much more alcohol used
and it has much more severe effects.
I think if you'd say something three times
out loud, people take it as fact.
And also, I think there are certain
ideas that people want to believe.
That really fit in with
cultural stereotypes.
It is hard to get rid of those.
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