Estimating the population effect of maternal alcohol use disorders on the educational achievement of children

ABSTRACT Objectives Previous research has identified that heavy maternal alcohol use impacts on a child’s health and development including poor cognitive and educational outcomes. However, very few studies have used objective measures of heavy alcohol-use and standardised school-based measures. Fur...

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Main Authors: Katherine Hafekost, Sarah Johnson, Carol Bower, James Semmens, Colleen O'Leary
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Swansea University 2017-04-01
Series:International Journal of Population Data Science
Online Access:https://ijpds.org/article/view/204
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spelling doaj-a233d15be1184db7bc9f95c31ac558592020-11-24T23:05:47ZengSwansea UniversityInternational Journal of Population Data Science2399-49082017-04-011110.23889/ijpds.v1i1.204204Estimating the population effect of maternal alcohol use disorders on the educational achievement of childrenKatherine Hafekost0Sarah Johnson1Carol Bower2James Semmens3Colleen O'Leary4Telethon Kids InstituteTelethon Kids InstituteTelethon Kids InstituteCurtin University of TechnologyGovernment of Western Australia, Department of HealthABSTRACT Objectives Previous research has identified that heavy maternal alcohol use impacts on a child’s health and development including poor cognitive and educational outcomes. However, very few studies have used objective measures of heavy alcohol-use and standardised school-based measures. Further, the magnitude of the effect of heavy maternal alcohol use on the educational outcomes of children in Australia is unknown. The primary aim of the project was to examine the association between in-utero and childhood exposure to maternal alcohol use disorder, which provides a proxy for heavy alcohol use, and children’s educational outcomes. Approach This Western Australian population cohort study made use of linked administrative data to compare the educational outcomes of a cohort of exposed children born between 1989 and 2007 whose mother had an alcohol related diagnosis recorded on health datasets, with children whose mother did not have a diagnosis. The exposed cohort of mothers was frequency matched on maternal age within Indigenous status, and year of child’s birth with a comparison cohort of mothers without an alcohol-related diagnosis. Records were linked with education records up to 2011, which included the results of standardised state and national testing for children (ages 8-14), and school attendance data (ages 6-18). Mixed multivariate models were used to examine the relationship between exposure, and timing of exposure in relation to pregnancy, and the risk of failure to meet educational benchmarks for reading, writing, spelling, numeracy and school attendance. Separate analyses were run for Indigenous and non-Indigenous children. Results A higher proportion of both Indigenous and non-Indigenous exposed children failed to reach minimum standards for all domains of testing compared to those in the unexposed cohort. The risk of failure in the exposed cohort remained significant with adjustment for a set of known confounders and there was no consistent relationship between timing of exposure and academic performance. Conclusion This project provides a unique view of how maternal alcohol use disorders affect a child’s educational outcomes. The use of linked administrative data overcomes the use of retrospective recall of past behaviour, and self-reports of drinking patterns which may be considered socially unacceptable. Results of this project indicate that children whose mothers have an alcohol use disorder are academically at risk. These results suggest that routine monitoring of maternal alcohol use, early identification of at-risk children and intervention at both the school and family level may assist vulnerable children to reach academic benchmarks.https://ijpds.org/article/view/204
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katherine Hafekost
Sarah Johnson
Carol Bower
James Semmens
Colleen O'Leary
spellingShingle Katherine Hafekost
Sarah Johnson
Carol Bower
James Semmens
Colleen O'Leary
Estimating the population effect of maternal alcohol use disorders on the educational achievement of children
International Journal of Population Data Science
author_facet Katherine Hafekost
Sarah Johnson
Carol Bower
James Semmens
Colleen O'Leary
author_sort Katherine Hafekost
title Estimating the population effect of maternal alcohol use disorders on the educational achievement of children
title_short Estimating the population effect of maternal alcohol use disorders on the educational achievement of children
title_full Estimating the population effect of maternal alcohol use disorders on the educational achievement of children
title_fullStr Estimating the population effect of maternal alcohol use disorders on the educational achievement of children
title_full_unstemmed Estimating the population effect of maternal alcohol use disorders on the educational achievement of children
title_sort estimating the population effect of maternal alcohol use disorders on the educational achievement of children
publisher Swansea University
series International Journal of Population Data Science
issn 2399-4908
publishDate 2017-04-01
description ABSTRACT Objectives Previous research has identified that heavy maternal alcohol use impacts on a child’s health and development including poor cognitive and educational outcomes. However, very few studies have used objective measures of heavy alcohol-use and standardised school-based measures. Further, the magnitude of the effect of heavy maternal alcohol use on the educational outcomes of children in Australia is unknown. The primary aim of the project was to examine the association between in-utero and childhood exposure to maternal alcohol use disorder, which provides a proxy for heavy alcohol use, and children’s educational outcomes. Approach This Western Australian population cohort study made use of linked administrative data to compare the educational outcomes of a cohort of exposed children born between 1989 and 2007 whose mother had an alcohol related diagnosis recorded on health datasets, with children whose mother did not have a diagnosis. The exposed cohort of mothers was frequency matched on maternal age within Indigenous status, and year of child’s birth with a comparison cohort of mothers without an alcohol-related diagnosis. Records were linked with education records up to 2011, which included the results of standardised state and national testing for children (ages 8-14), and school attendance data (ages 6-18). Mixed multivariate models were used to examine the relationship between exposure, and timing of exposure in relation to pregnancy, and the risk of failure to meet educational benchmarks for reading, writing, spelling, numeracy and school attendance. Separate analyses were run for Indigenous and non-Indigenous children. Results A higher proportion of both Indigenous and non-Indigenous exposed children failed to reach minimum standards for all domains of testing compared to those in the unexposed cohort. The risk of failure in the exposed cohort remained significant with adjustment for a set of known confounders and there was no consistent relationship between timing of exposure and academic performance. Conclusion This project provides a unique view of how maternal alcohol use disorders affect a child’s educational outcomes. The use of linked administrative data overcomes the use of retrospective recall of past behaviour, and self-reports of drinking patterns which may be considered socially unacceptable. Results of this project indicate that children whose mothers have an alcohol use disorder are academically at risk. These results suggest that routine monitoring of maternal alcohol use, early identification of at-risk children and intervention at both the school and family level may assist vulnerable children to reach academic benchmarks.
url https://ijpds.org/article/view/204
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