Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
917704 Infant Behavior and Development 2006 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundTransition to parenthood involves considerable psychological, social and physiological changes. We examined how prenatal and perinatal mental health and medical conditions predict infant's developmental and health status at 12 months, and whether former infertility and assisted reproduction treatment (ART) affect the predictor model.MethodsThe participants were 520 mothers who filled in questionnaires at the second trimester of pregnancy (T1), and when the child was 2 months (T2) and 12 months old (T3). Depressive and anxiety symptoms indicate reduced levels of mental health, and medical factors involve problems in pregnancy (e.g., high blood pressure and bleeding) and birth complications (pain and loss of blood). Neonatal health refers to, e.g., birth-weight and neurological status. At 12 months mothers reported infants’ verbal and motor development and general health status.ResultsFirst, it was shown that generally maternal prenatal anxiety and medical problems in pregnancy together predicted infant's developmental problems at 12 months through poor neonatal health, and medical problems alone also through increased level of birth complications. Second, the predictor models differed according to the history of infertility. In the ART group prenatal depression and anxiety and medical problems together predicted infant's developmental problems through maternal post-partum depression, and medical problems also through birth complications, whereas in the spontaneous conception group psychological and medical paths were separated and did not carry on developmental and health problems into 12 months.ConclusionsMaternal health care should consider both psychological and medical risk paths across the whole transition to parenthood, and be aware of specific mediating paths in the risk groups.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
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