Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Half in poll unsure what causes FASD
But 88% say don't drink alcohol if pregnant
Nearly nine in every 10 Manitobans has heard of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder.
But only half really know what causes it.
The questions
Have you ever heard of FASD?
Yes 89 per cent
No 11 per cent
In your opinion, how much alcohol, if any, would you consider a "safe" amount for a woman to drink at one time while pregnant?
None 88 per cent
1 drink 8 per cent
2+ drinks 1 per cent
Don't know/unsure 3 per cent
FASD is a form of brain damage
Strongly agree 54 per cent
Moderately agree 22 per cent
Neutral 11 per cent
Moderately disagree 2 per cent
Strongly disagree 3 per cent
Don't know/unsure 8 per cent
The only way to get FASD is by drinking during pregnancy
Strongly agree 46 per cent
Moderately agree 14 per cent
Neutral 10 per cent
Moderately disagree 7 per cent
Strongly disagree 9 per cent
Don't know/unsure 14 per cent
Poll was conducted by Probe Research using a random telephone sample of 1,002 Manitobans between Sept. 16 and Sept. 30, 2010. It is considered accurate within 3 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.
Those are the findings of a Probe Research poll done exclusively for the Winnipeg Free Press.
It found 89 per cent of Manitobans had heard of FASD but only 46 per cent strongly agreed that the only way to get FASD is if your mother drinks alcoholic beverages while pregnant.
Another 14 per cent agreed moderately with that statement, suggesting slight uncertainty about their answer, and another 24 per cent were neutral or unsure how to answer the question. Sixteen per cent disagreed completely.
Aboriginals and adult women under 35 were the most likely to know the only cause of FASD is maternal drinking, with 80 per cent agreeing strongly or moderately. Men and women over 55 years old were the least likely to know.
The poll was conducted from Sept. 16 - 30, 2010 and is considered accurate within three percentage points, 19 times out of 20.
The poll also found 54 per cent knew for certain FASD is a form of brain damage, and 22 per cent only moderately agreed. Nearly one-quarter of respondents didn't agree or were unsure.
In general, women were more knowledgeable about FASD than men, particularly women of child-bearing age.
Probe Research associate Curtis Brown said that is good because clearly, messages about the dangers of drinking while pregnant are getting across to some people.
"Women are more targeted by public education campaigns and those messages are reaching them," Brown said.
But he said the poll also shows there is a lot of work yet to do.
"There is still a pretty significant percentage of the population that doesn't agree (that you shouldn't drink while pregnant)," Brown said.
Three times since 1999, the Public Health Agency of Canada has conducted surveys about knowledge of FASD. It found a progressive improvement in knowledge about FASD and the harm of drinking while pregnant. In 1999, 64 per cent of Canadian men and 68 per cent of Canadian women surveyed said any amount of alcohol during pregnancy can harm a baby. Seven years later, that had improved to 68 per cent of men and 79 per cent of women.
The surveys, conducted by Environics, also found while most Canadians were aware of FASD, knowledge about what it is and what effects it has was far more limited.
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition March 3, 2011 A6
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