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This study published in 2020 explores the cognitive and behavioural difficulties and impairments experience by children with FASD aged between four and 12 years from the perspective of caregivers.

Date:
May 2020
Journal name:
Research in Developmental Disabilities
Authors:
Stewart McDougall, Amy Finlay-Jones, Fiona Arney, Andrea Gordon
Page last updated 16 June 2021

This paper published in 2020 analyses the content of news media messages on drinking during pregnancy in Australia over an 18-year period to understand whether and how the nature of messages communicated to women has changed over time.

Date:
July 2020
Journal name:
Alcohol and Alcoholism
Authors:
Cook M Leggat G Pennay A
Page last updated 16 June 2021

This study published in 2020 examined whether drinking or smoking while breastfeeding was associated with reductions in Australian National Assessment Program-Literacy and Numeracy assessments. Data was sourced from The Growing Up in Australia Study. This is an ongoing longitudinal study of 5107 infants and mothers recruited in 2004 and followed over time every two years.

Date:
March 2020
Journal name:
Nutrients
Authors:
Gibson L. Porter M
Page last updated 16 June 2021

This report published in 2020 outlines the development of the digital online Getting on with it (GOWI) pilot between NOFASD and Dr Anita Gibbs over the course of 2019, and includes a combined evaluation report of an internal brief survey as well as an external telephone-based evaluation undertaken in early 2020 by an independent, external contractor

Date:
March 2020
Authors:
Gibbs, A., Harrington, S., Robinson, C, Brooks, C. Dedman, C.
Page last updated 16 June 2021

The current study examined the experiences of Australian and New Zealand professionals who have attended fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD)-specific training and the impact of this training on their current practices. Publication: Journal of

Page last updated 2 March 2021

Fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) is a significant public health issue in Australia that is poorly diagnosed, chronic and costly. FASD is a diffuse acquired brain injury secondary to prenatal alcohol exposure. The prevalence rate of FASD among

Page last updated 2 March 2021