
Getting pregnant and having a baby can motivate people to make changes in their life. This can include substance use, such as alcohol, cannabis, commercial tobacco, vapour, and unregulated substances. Learn more: Pregnant or newly parenting with substance use - BC Women's Hospital and Health Centre
While there is no safe amount of substance use during pregnancy, there are ways to reduce unintentional (accidental) harms for parents and their babies. This includes safety planning, keeping homes and vehicles smoke and vapour free, and reducing overdose risk. Learn more: Understanding harm reduction: Substance use - HealthLink BC
Stigma exists around substance use and parenting (watch the video: Women Together. Conquer Stigma. Perinatal Substance Use). To address the stigma, Northern Health is educating our staff who care for families with new babies at risk of substance withdrawal.
Explore the resources below if you’d like more information for yourself or someone you care about. Families with perinatal substance use issues many also have challenges with their mental health. If you or someone you know needs help, reach out: Perinatal mental health.
Featured resources
- Cannabis – Northern Health
- Caring for your baby at risk of substance use withdrawal – Fraser Health and BC Women’s Hospital and Health Centre
- Moms stop the harm
- Perinatal substance use – BC Women’s Hospital
- Smoking and commercial tobacco reduction – Northern Health
- Stop stigma, save lives – Northern Health
- Taking care: A short guide for breastfeeding and substance use – Centre of Excellence for Women’s Health
Featured NH Stories
- 2024 world no commercial tobacco day
- “Don’t judge us. None of us want to die.” A success story of a women struggling with addiction
- It takes a village: Supporting a loved one with addiction
- The risks of edibles: Protecting children from accidental cannabis poisoning
- Remembering those who’ve lost their lives to overdose, and introducing the regional peer coordinator
For more information
- Email us at HealthyStart@northernhealth.ca
- August 31 is International Overdose Awareness Day – HelpStartsHere
- For information about substance use support in local First Nations communities, see Harm reduction - First Nations Health Authority (FNHA)