‘Utterly Wrong’: What Happens when the Alcohol Industry Makes Pregnancy Warning Posters

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Thousands of posters warning pregnant women about the dangers of alcohol have had to be removed from the walls of hospitals and GP clinics around the country.

Fairfax Media can reveal DrinkWise, a “safe drinking” group almost entirely funded by alcohol companies, recently withdrew 2400 pregnancy warning posters after doctors and health groups told it the message was “utterly wrong”.

While the headline “It’s safest not to drink while pregnant” reflected government guidelines, the text beneath, including the words “It’s not known if alcohol is safe to drink when you are pregnant”, was considered misleading and inaccurate.

Tony Bartone, president of the AMA, who raised concerns with DrinkWise, said the small print was “fundamentally incorrect” because the science was clear that alcohol had devastating effects on unborn babies.

“Alcohol is a teratogen, it can cause birth defects, so we couldn’t understand why that messaging was there,” he said.

“I told them about the misleading information and potential outcomes and they responded in a quick and timely manner.”

DrinkWise produced the posters and enlisted Tonic Health Media to distribute them to a “small number of hospitals” and thousands of GP clinics across the country.

All the posters have now been replaced with an updated DrinkWise poster.

Dr Bartone questioned how DrinkWise was able to spread “misinformation” in the first place and called for greater transparency.

 

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Source: The Sydney Morning Herald

 

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