[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 157 (2011), Part 9]
[Senate]
[Page 13253]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




             FETAL ALCOHOL SPECTRUM DISORDERS AWARENESS DAY

  Ms. MURKOWSKI. Mr. President, for the 13th consecutive year, 
communities across the world today are pausing during the 9th hour of 
the 9th day of the 9th month to acknowledge International Fetal Alcohol 
Spectrum Disorders Awareness Day. FASD Day will be observed in my home 
State of Alaska with ceremonies across the State.
  I am grateful that this body is also recognizing Fetal Alcohol 
Spectrum Disorders Awareness Day with a moment of reflection. For this, 
I thank my colleagues, especially the senior Senator from South Dakota, 
Tim Johnson, who has joined with me in offering a resolution 
recognizing September 9, 2011, as National Fetal Alcohol Spectrum 
Disorders Awareness Day. I hope we will continue to pause in the ninth 
hour of the ninth day each September until fetal alcohol spectrum 
disorders are eradicated.
  FASD is an umbrella term that describes a range of physical and 
mental birth defects that can occur in a fetus when a pregnant woman 
consumes alcohol. It is a leading cause of nonhereditary mental 
retardation in the United States. Many children affected by maternal 
drinking during pregnancy have irreversible conditions, including 
severe brain damage. It is causing permanent lifelong disability.
  Unlike thousands of other diseases, FASD is 100 percent preventable. 
Prevention merely requires a woman to abstain from alcohol during 
pregnancy. Knowing that it is entirely preventable, it saddens me to 
think that every year in this country an estimated 1 in every 100 
babies is born with FASD. That is about 40,000 infants annually. FASD 
affects more children than Down's syndrome, cerebral palsy, spina 
bifida, and muscular dystrophy combined.
  All in all, the direct and indirect economic costs of FASD in the 
United States are estimated to be $5.4 billion. FASD is found in every 
community in America. It does not discriminate.
  During my time in the Senate, I have given many speeches recognizing 
FASD day. In each of those speeches, I have talked about Alaska's high 
rate of FASD. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention project 
established that in 2002, Alaska's FASD rate was the highest in the 
Nation. Among our Native communities, the rate of FASD has been 15 
times higher than in non-Native areas in our State. But this year I am 
proud to report that our statistics have vastly improved.
  According to the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services, 
Alaska Native babies were born with fetal alcohol syndrome half as 
often around the year 2000 as they were 5 to 7 years earlier. Through a 
major Federal-State prevention and education effort from 1991 to 1996, 
and with a second effort from 1998 to 2006, the rate of fetal alcohol 
syndrome among Alaska Native babies decreased by 49 percent. Alaska's 
overall rate dropped to 13.5 from 20.0. More work can and should 
certainly be done, but this is a remarkable improvement for a State 
with historically the highest rate of FASD.
  Mr. President, 40,000 American children each year are born with FASD. 
But education in prevention, treatment, and research of FASD will save 
countless future health care costs relating to this devastating but 
entirely preventable disorder.
  I appreciate my colleagues' support of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum 
Disorder Awareness Day and hope we all remember the innocent babies 
afflicted with this disorder. I hope we continue to recognize the ninth 
hour of the ninth day of each September until fetal alcohol syndrome 
disorders are eradicated.

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