"A very important choice you can make for the health of your baby is to abstain from alcohol while pregnant, planning a pregnancy or breast-feeding," the poster now reads.
Simon Strahan, DrinkWise's chief executive, said the organisation fixed the language after receiving a complaint from the Australian Medical Association.
"DrinkWise is committed to communicating the importance of women abstaining from alcohol while pregnant, planning a pregnancy or breast-feeding," he told the SMH.
Public health organisations around world, including the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Health and Medical Research Council in Australia, and the National Health Service in the United Kingdom, have all said that no amount of alcohol, whether it be wine, liquor or beer, is safe for pregnant women. Drinking can cause miscarriage, stillbirth and lifelong disabilities, according to the CDC.
Michael Thorn, chief executive of the Foundation of Alcohol Research and Education, or FARE, in Canberra, accused DrinkWise of engaging in a campaign "to stave off the threat of responsible and effective regulation."
"The warning needs to be on all alcohol products and needs to be blunt and to the point - 'Do not drink during pregnancy or if you're thinking of becoming pregnant,' " Thorn told the SMH.
DrinkWise was founded in 2005 and is funded by the alcohol industry. According to its website, it's an "independent, not-for-profit organisation" that focuses on bringing about "a healthier and safer drinking culture in Australia."
But critics have long questioned the independence of an organisation with a board that consists of representatives from beverage and hospitality industries. Six of its 13 board members are from alcohol companies and organisations, such as Lion Beer Australia, Brewers' Association of Australia and New Zealand, Winemakers' Federation of Australia, Australian Liquor Stores Association, Distilled Spirits Industry Council of Australia and Australian Hotels Association.
In 2017, the medical journal Drug and Alcohol Review accused DrinkWise of distorting and minimising the role alcohol plays in causing cancer. For example, DrinkWise says, "Cancer risk associated with the consumption of alcohol is related to patterns of drinking, particularly heavy drinking over extended periods of time." But the Alcohol and Drug Review described it as an obfuscation that falsely claims only heavy or frequent drinking leads to higher risks of cancer.
In the United States, a National Institutes of Health study that was supposed to assess whether moderate drinking - a single drink a day - has health benefits was halted after the New York Times revealed that the idea for the research was pitched to liquor company executives, who then agreed to fund it through a private foundation.
Some research has suggested such a benefit, but the conclusion remains controversial, and the US dietary guidelines recommend that people who do not drink alcohol should not start.
The study would cost about US$100 million and would stretch over 10 years. The New York Times reported that five large alcohol manufacturers - Anheuser-Busch InBev, Heineken, Diageo, Pernod Ricard and Carlsberg - paid for the study.