General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: WAR ON WOMEN: Tennessee Arrests First Mother Under Its New Pregnancy Criminalization Law [View all]brett_jv
(1,245 posts)To a nearly-born fetus? I'd say that the fetus had a very crappy 24 hours or so, and after that, it was perfectly fine and in no way permanently harmed.
Now, if she was using meth throughout ... then that baby is almost certainly royally screwed. Of course I dunno offhand if meth gets through the placental barrier. I did read somewhere that THC is too large of a molecule to pass through, dunno about meth.
We do know for a fact however that alcohol and nicotine will harm a fetus, esp. alcohol in large/consistent quantities ... to the point where it even causes actual physical defects. Yet, for some reason, there's no law about taking in those substances.
Hell, even the purported target (opioids) are not known to cause physical/permanent defects, they are only known to cause FAS (withdrawals that last a few days after birth). Obviously an unpleasant way to come into the world, but there's no evidence (I've heard of) of actual permanent harm, UNLIKE with nicotine and alcohol.
This is just more WoW crap.