As cannabis use continues to become more and more mainstream, medical science is (finally) ramping up research to see how the still-illegal-in-New York drug affects fertility and reproduction.
And, unsurprisingly, it turns out bongs and babies do not mix.
“Our research team has been focusing on substance use in pregnancy, and the potential effects on the unborn child, which also may affect them in later life,” the study’s senior author, Dr. Mark Walker, the head of the department of obstetrics, gynecology and newborn care at Ottawa Hospital, tells the Post.
Walker and his team small for gestational age” babies. Researchers used the BORN Ontario perinatal registry, which collects data on every pregnancy and birth in the province.
“We used a new approach which matched women who reported use with those who did not use cannabis,” Walker says. “The matching accounts for other factors, including tobacco smoking and alcohol, which may also lead to adverse outcomes such as preterm birth.”
In the study, the overall rate of preterm birth was 12% in reported users compared to 6% in non-users. While twice the risk seems like an important stat, Walker says the numbers were slightly lower after accounting for other factors like the age of the mother, obstetrical history, and the use of other drugs and alcohol in pregnancy. After taking this into account, the rates were 10% vs 7% (so 3% percent higher or about 1.4 times the rate).