Whilst this is indeed a frightening article, there seem to be some discrepancies about the way that the data is presented - and don't forget that anecdote is not the same as evidence, so one person's (albeit tragic) story does not justify mass hysteria or self-flagelation.
The first thing I noticed was this quote:
"The brutal fact is that his head is an unusual shape because he was so drunk while in the womb that he lay most of the time with his head on his mother's pelvis." Now, please excuse me if I'm being ignorant about this, but presumably drunkenness in the foetus does not mean that the amniotic fluid ceases to have buoyancy - does alcohol counteract the laws of physics? And surely babies are supposed to end up with their heads cradled by the mother's pelvis? I was under the impression that the unusual formation of the skull in babies born with FAS was down to chromosomal changes caused by ingestion of alcohol in the first twelve weeks of pregnancy.
Furthermore, the figures as they are presented don't add up (but then nothing does at the moment, and my maths may be shakier than usual). The article says that 28 babies are born every week with the most severe form of FASD: that's 1456 annually. If, as the article claims, 7500 babies are born with FASD, and 3 in every thousand of these have the most severe symptons then that figure looks like being more like 225 annually.
I may have misunderstood all of this, and I'd be glad to have someone tell me how I've misunderstood it, but when journalists use phrases such as 'It is believed that up to three in every 1,000 babies suffer from the most severe form of the syndrome, which leads to brain damage and severe learning difficulties' i find myself asking by who, and on what grounds. Also, given the fact that the article states that there isn't enough evidence about the effects of alcohol within the medical profession itself, I'd very much like to know how the doctors and medical opinions quoted in the study are so sure of their diagnosis.
Yes, there are undoubtedly risks from exposing embryos and foetuses to alcohol, but writing about these risks in such a hysterical, moralistic and reactionary manner doesn't make the situation any clearer. If anything, it just strengthens the atmosphere of control and dependency fostered by our warning-rich society.