Abstract

The scientific discovery of foetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) in the early 1970s made pregnant women's heavy alcohol consumption problematic. A growing concern over prenatal alcohol intake has made FAS a major public health issue in the developed western countries and led to the proliferation of practices that aim to prevent it. This article provides a Nordic perspective on the existing and largely North American literature on the politics of FAS prevention. This article analyses how the proposal to use the compulsory treatment of pregnant women as an FAS prevention tool emerged and became a disputed political issue in Finland. The analysis is qualitative and the data consists of medical journals and political documents between the end of the 1970s and the 1990s. This article depicts how the foetus was constructed as a subject needing protection and how the prominence of the foetus served as justification for the demands for compulsory measures. This article argues that the strong professional status of the medical advocates of compulsory measures and the position of the foetus as an ‘ideal victim’ gave weight to demands for compulsory treatment. However, it is suggested that the public health approach that characterised Finnish alcohol and welfare policy made the compulsory care of pregnant women a controversial issue. This article concludes that during the study period, the Finnish FAS prevention discourse became increasingly individualised and focused on the foetus.

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