Starting today, you can text a letter of support for the FASD Respect Act (SB 2238/ HR 4151) to your 2 Senators and your Representative. Simply text the words SIGN PRVJQX to the number: 50409. You will be asked to verify some of your information (name, address and email) so that the letter below can be delivered directly to your legislators.

Letter Text:

I’m writing in support of The FASD Respect Act (HR4151/S2238).

Congress first addressed Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD) as Fetal Alcohol Syndrome in 1998. Since then funding has dwindled in the case of research and surveillance, and stopped all together in the case of support, training or intervention on a federal level. Currently only 1 million dollars at HRSA for a pilot project on screening and intervention exists as a federal investment for this population with an estimated prevalence of 1:20 and a rate of drinking among pregnant women rising from 1 in 9 to 1 in 7 in recent years.

The House Appropriations Committee report in the 2023 Presidents budget urges the CDC to do more, but no additional funding was granted. Without federal investment, few if any states have implemented or maintained programs serving people with prenatal alcohol exposure despite investment in those impacted by prenatal drug exposure, a condition known to cause far less long-term harm.

Despite findings that prenatal alcohol exposure remains the number one preventable cause of birth defects and neurodevelopmental disabilities in the United States (Alcohol Research & Health, Vol. 34, No. 1, 2011), the National FAS Task Force authority expired in 2007, annual SAMHSA funding of $9.8 million was reduced to $1 million in FY2014 and eliminated in FY2016, other FASD-related funding has declined and action has stalled on legislation to update federal statutes to address FASD specifically and strengthen federal programming to reverse the upward trend in prevalence and prevent FASD.

The mental health toll of a Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders is astonishing, over 95% of individuals with a FASD have co-existing mental health conditions, with high rates of suicide, addiction and homelessness. Unfortunately, standard mental health practices do not work effectively with this population or take into account the brain-based learning differences in a person with FASD.

FASD informed supports and services are desperately needed but are not regularly available to the vast majority of the population. The FASD Respect Act would help to change that.

I’m writing to ask you to co-sponsor and support The FASD Respect Act (HR4151/S2238) introduced in the House by the late Representative Don Young (AK) and Representative Betty McCollum (MN) and in the Senate by Senators Lisa Murkowski (AK) and Amy Klobuchar (MN).    Congress cannot address mental health without addressing Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders.


1 Comment

Michelle Trager · March 31, 2022 at 8:12 pm

Totally love this. Used it, sent it to over 30 people in various states across the country. Probably will try to do about 20 more. THANK YOU for setting this up!

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