A register-based study of long-term health and social care costs among children with prenatal alcohol exposure
Mirjami Jolma, Mikko Koivu-Jolma, Taisto Sarkola, Mika Gissler, Niina-Maria Nissinen, Hanna Kahila, Anne Sarajuuri, Paulus Torkki, Ilona Autti-Rämö, Anne Koponen, Nafisa Jadavji, Nafisa Jadavji, Nafisa Jadavji, Nafisa Jadavji

TL;DR
This study finds that children with prenatal alcohol exposure have significantly higher health and social care costs, especially those diagnosed with FASD.
Contribution
The study provides new empirical data on cumulative health and social care costs in children with prenatal alcohol exposure up to age 20.
Findings
Children with PAE had significantly higher hospital costs for somatic and psychiatric conditions compared to controls.
Out-of-home care costs were 30-fold higher in the FASD group and 17-fold higher in other PAE groups compared to controls.
Early FASD diagnosis may reduce secondary complications and associated costs in adolescence.
Abstract
Prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) associated with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) often remain underdiagnosed. They globally cause a wide range of health and social problems leading to high costs. To outline cumulative health and social care costs in children related with PAE with and without diagnosed FASD, we followed 427 children with PAE until the age of 20 years, and 1795 controls born 1992–2001 until the year 2016. All hospital care and out-of-home care episodes, including placements in foster or residential care, were analyzed, and their costs estimated. Age-dependent patterns of diagnoses and costs of those with PAE with and without diagnosed FASD were compared to controls. Children with PAE had significantly higher risks and hospital costs for both somatic and psychiatric conditions compared with controls. Mean cumulative hospital costs were 55500€ (IQR, interquartile…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPrenatal Substance Exposure Effects · Alcohol Consumption and Health Effects · Substance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes
