Pregnancy: from alcohol to tablets more care in the first thousand days but not in the South
The behaviour of mothers and families is improving but Italia remains far from the standards. President Bellantone: 'Reduce inequalities'
Key points
Women's behaviour during pregnancy and families' behaviour in the two years following the birth has an impact on children's health, but the recommended standards and territorial and social differences, particularly in the South, are still far from being met. This is the message that emerges from the latest data collection of the 0-2 years surveillance system promoted by the Ministry of Health, coordinated by the Istituto Superiore di Sanità and carried out in collaboration with the Regions.
"Not all boys and girls are born and grow up in the same conditions," says Rocco Bellantone, president of the Iss. Social, economic and cultural inequalities already manifest their effect before birth and this effect tends to widen in the first years of life, conditioning health at all stages of life. For this reason, public health that is attentive to the first thousand days cannot separate health promotion from the reduction of health inequalities by building fairer and more equitable communities'.
First encouraging signs of prevention
The data, however, show encouraging signs: few women now report smoking or drinking alcohol during pregnancy. However, there is still ample room for improvement, both with respect to behaviours 'traditionally' at the centre of prevention policies such as the appropriate intake of folic acid and breastfeeding, and with respect to emerging issues such as children's exposure to TV, tablets and mobile phones and the spread of shared reading in the family. There is still a lot to be done also on parenting support, the Iss report highlights, with data showing good participation of mothers in birth accompaniment meetings, but few mothers receive a home visit after childbirth and just over half are fathers who take leave, with important territorial differences.
"In this edition," explains Enrica Pizzi, scientific head of the surveillance, "almost all the indicators analysed show a positive trend compared to the 2022 survey, although there is considerable room for improvement. Moreover, the results confirm a strong relationship between the socio-demographic characteristics of mothers, such as level of education and geographical area of residence, and adherence to recommendations in the first thousand days".
The behaviours on folic acid, smoking and alcohol
Folic acid is one of the clearest examples of the gap between knowledge and correct use. 93.2% of mothers claim to have taken it during pregnancy, but only 35.4% did so appropriately. Most start when the pregnancy is already underway, reducing the preventive effect. The lowest figure is in Campania, with 24.6%, the highest in Veneto, with 44.4%.

