A seemingly well-meaning warning from the federal government about the risks of drinking and pregnancy has set off a firestorm of outrage.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention simply meant to caution women who may plan to get pregnant, or who might accidentally get pregnant, about drinking alcohol. What many women heard was a patronizing and condescending lecture that suggested they were not in charge of their own bodies.
What CDC said seemed dry enough: “About half of all U.S. pregnancies are unplanned and, even if planned, most women do not know they are pregnant until they are 4-6 weeks into the pregnancy. This means a woman might be drinking and exposing her developing baby to alcohol without knowing it,” the agency said in a “Vital Signs” report released Tuesday.
But another line, which evokes some wild partying, appears to have gone over the line for a number of women: “More than 3 million US women are at risk of exposing their developing baby to alcohol because they are drinking, having sex, and not using birth control to prevent pregnancy.”
This was too much for Washington Post commentator Alexandra Petri.
In an opinion piece headlined “The CDC’s incredibly condescending warning to young women,” Petri writes: “No alcohol for you, young women! The most important fact about you is not that you are people but that you might potentially contain people one day.”
Petri takes offense at the CDC’s warning that alcohol lower inhibitions — so people may be more likely to engage in unprotected sex. “Also, your drinking is a type of witchery that can whip babies into existence out of nowhere,” she writes.
RELATED: Zika virus outbreak: WHO chief convenes emergency committee meeting
The CDC’s Dr. Anne Schuchat, a veteran of news briefings and media coverage, made it clear that the agency was not talking about women alone.
“We recommend that everybody, all adults, be screened for alcohol and counseled about reducing their alcohol consumption if they have problems with it,” Schuchat said in a call with reporters Tuesday.
“We urge women and their partners and their friends to be supportive of that idea … ‘I’m not going to drink for a while, because I’m thinking about getting pregnant.’”
The recommendation is based on plenty of science. Studies show there’s no known safe level of alcohol use during pregnancy and one in 10 pregnant women in the U.S. admit to drinking alcohol at least every now and then. Fetal alcohol syndrome is a serious and permanently disabling condition and can include microcephaly — the very condition that prompted the World Health Organization to declare Zika’s spread a global health emergency.
The CDC has no regulatory powers. All it can do is issue advice. But that advice hit a sore spot.









