
As a newborn, Braxton Jones couldn’t stop shaking.
He was born to a mother dependant on methadone, the drug she used to ween herself off heroin.
And the impact of her addiction on him is evident in a shocking video.
He is just one of the 130,000+ babies born with a diagnosable drug dependency, known as Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome, in the US in the past decade.
Now six months old, he had to endure and overcome other symptoms of drug withdrawal, including over-sensitivity, trouble feeding and tremors.
You can watch the video here:
His mother, Clorissa, said Braxton – her second child – helped her battle her drug addiction by providing her the motivation she needed to stay clean throughout her pregnancy.
Her first son, Jacoby, was born addicted to heroin.
“I was in labour, in the bathroom shooting heroin about to give birth to my child,” she said.
“Nothing matters except for getting high. When I’m getting high, nothing matters, I’m very selfish, I’m self-centred.”
She continued to use the drug after Jacoby was born, even taking him with her to score, and lost custody of the boy following a car crash when he was 22 days old.
A heroin and opioid addiction is sweeping across the US, health experts warn, and it’s having a dramatic impact on the vulnerable babies of addicts.
In 2013, 27,000 babies were born drug dependent in the country – an increase of more than five times in the previous decade.