By Blake Farmer,
Nashville Public Radio December 13, 2019
Babies
born to mothers who used opioids during pregnancy represent one of the most
distressing legacies of an opioid epidemic that has claimed almost 400,000 lives and ravaged
communities.
In
fact, many of the ongoing lawsuits filed against drug companies refer to these
babies, fighting through withdrawal in hospital nurseries.
The cluster
of symptoms they experience, which include tremors, seizures and respiratory
distress, is known as neonatal abstinence syndrome, or NAS. Until recently,
doctors rarely looked for the condition. Then case numbers quadrupled over a
decade. Hospital care for newborns with NAS has cost Medicaid billions of dollars.
Studies indicate more than
30,000 babies with the condition are born every year in the U.S. — about one
every 15 minutes. Although their plight is mentioned in opioid-related
litigation, there are growing concerns that those children will be left out of
financial settlements being negotiated now.
Robbie
Nicholson, of Eagleville, Tenn., tried to comfort her second child while the
baby slowly underwent withdrawal from drugs Nicholson had taken during
pregnancy.
“The
whole experience is just traumatizing, really,” Nicholson said.
Nicholson’s
ordeal began right after her first pregnancy. To help with postpartum recovery,
her doctor prescribed her a pile of Percocets. That was the norm.
“Back
then, it was like I was on them for a full month. And then he was like, ‘OK,
you’re done.’ And I was like, ‘Oh, my God, I’ve got a newborn, first-time mom,
no energy, no sleep, like that was getting me through,'” she said. “It just
built and built and built off that.”
After
developing a full-blown addiction to painkillers, Nicholson eventually found
her way into recovery. In accordance with evidence-based guidelines, she took
buprenorphine, a medication that helps keep her opioid cravings at bay. And
then came another pregnancy.
But
buprenorphine — as well as methadone, another drug used in medication-assisted
addiction treatment — is a special kind of opioid. Its use during pregnancy can
still result in withdrawal symptoms for the newborn, although increasingly
physicians have decided that the benefits of keeping a mother on the
medication, to prevent a potentially fatal relapse and overdose during
pregnancy, outweigh the risk of her giving birth to a baby with neonatal
abstinence syndrome.
Treatment
protocols for NAS vary from hospital to hospital, but doctors and neonatal
nurses have become better at diagnosing the condition and weaning newborns
safely. Sometimes the mom and her baby can even stay together if the infant
doesn’t have to be sent to the neonatal intensive care unit.
But not
much is known about the long-term effects of NAS, and parents and medical
professionals worry about the future of children exposed in utero to opioids.
“I
wanted her to be perfect, and she is absolutely perfect,” Nicholson said. “But
in the back of my mind, it’s always going to be there.”
There
are thousands of children like Nicholson’s daughter entering the education
system. Dr. Stephen Patrick, a neonatologist in Nashville, Tenn., said schools
and early childhood programs are on the front lines now.
“You
hear teachers talking about infants with a development delay,” he said. “I just
got an email this morning from somebody.”
Studies
haven’t proven a direct link between in utero exposure to opioids and
behavior problems in kids. And it’s challenging to untangle which problems
might stem from the lingering effects of maternal drug use, as opposed to the
impacts of growing up with a mother who struggles with addiction and perhaps
unemployment and housing instability as well. But Patrick, who leads the Center
for Child Health Policy at Vanderbilt University, said that is what his and
others’ ongoing research wants
to find out.
As
states, cities, counties and even hospitals go after drug companies in court,
Patrick fears these children will be left out. He pointed to public discussion of pending
settlements and the settlement deals struck between pharmaceutical
companies and the state of Oklahoma, which make little or no mention
of children.
Settlement
funds could be used to monitor the health of children who had NAS, to pay for
treatment of any developmental problems and to help schools serving those
children, Patrick explained.
“We
need to be in the mix right now, in schools, understanding how we can support
teachers, how we can support students as they try to learn, even as we work out
[whether there was] cause and effect of opioid use and developmental delays or
issues in school,” he said.
But
it’s a nuanced problem with no consensus on where money is most needed, even
among those who have worked on the problem for years.
Justin
Lanning started Nashville-based 180 Health Partners,
which works with mothers at risk of delivering a baby dependent on opioids. Most
are covered by Medicaid. And Medicaid departments in each state pay for most of
the NAS births in the U.S.
“We
have a few departments in our country that can operate at an epidemic scale,
and I think that’s where we have to focus our funds,” he said.
Lanning
sees a need to extend government-funded insurance for new mothers, since in
states like Tennessee that never expanded Medicaid, these moms can lose health
coverage just two months after giving
birth. That often derails the mother’s own drug treatment funded by Medicaid,
he said.
“This
consistency of care is so key to their recovery, to their productivity, to their
thriving,” Lanning said of new mothers in recovery.
Nicholson
now has a job at 180 Health Partners, assisting and mentoring pregnant women
struggling with addiction. Nicholson said their biggest need is a stable place
to live and reliable transportation.
“I just
feel kind of hopeless,” she said. “I don’t know what to tell these women.”
There
are many needs, Nicholson said, but no simple fix. Those who work with mothers
in recovery fear any opioid settlement money may be spread so thin that it
doesn’t benefit their children — the next generation of the crisis.
This
story is part of a partnership that includes Nashville Public Radio, NPR
and Kaiser Health News.
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