1. Weakened Resilience in Parenting Self-Efficacy in Pregnant Women Who Were Abused in Childhood: An Experimental Test
- Author
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F.C. Kunseler, M.L. Verhage, Carlo Schuengel, Mirjam Oosterman, Marleen H.M. de Moor, Clinical Child and Family Studies, LEARN! - Social cognition and learning, and EMGO+ - Mental Health
- Subjects
Child abuse ,History of childhood ,Physiology ,Maternal Health ,Social Sciences ,lcsh:Medicine ,Criminology ,Infant temperament ,Pediatrics ,Families ,Endocrinology ,Sociology ,5. Gender equality ,Pregnancy ,Risk Factors ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Child Abuse ,Child ,lcsh:Science ,Children ,Childhood abuse ,Multidisciplinary ,Parenting ,SDG 5 - Gender Equality ,05 social sciences ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Resilience, Psychological ,16. Peace & justice ,Mother-Child Relations ,Self Efficacy ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Female ,Crime ,Infants ,Attachment measures ,Research Article ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,SDG 16 - Peace ,Parenting Behavior ,Biology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Growth Factors ,medicine ,Adults ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychiatry ,Self report ,Self-efficacy ,Behavior ,Endocrine Physiology ,lcsh:R ,SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions ,Biology and Life Sciences ,medicine.disease ,Age Groups ,People and Places ,Women's Health ,Population Groupings ,lcsh:Q ,Self Report - Abstract
This study tested experimentally whether the combination of a history of childhood abuse and confrontation with difficult infant temperament is associated with negative changes in parenting self-efficacy. First-time pregnant women (N = 243) participated in the Adult Attachment Interview, which was used to assess the occurrence of abuse by parents in childhood and unresolved representations, and completed a task asking them to respond to infant cries. Sixty of the 243 participants (25%) experienced childhood abuse, mostly physical or sexual. The task simulated infant temperamental difficulty by manipulating soothing success in order to reflect an easy-to-soothe (80% soothing success) and a difficult-to-soothe infant (20% soothing success). Both after baseline and after each of the two stimulus series women assessed their parenting self-efficacy. Women who reported childhood abuse did not differ from women who reported no childhood abuse in parenting self-efficacy at baseline or in response to the easy-to-soothe infant (relative to baseline), but decreased more in parenting self-efficacy following the difficult-to-soothe infant. Effects did not vary according to resolution of trauma. These findings suggest that in response to infant temperamental difficulty, women who experienced childhood abuse may more easily lose confidence in their parenting abilities, which underlines the importance of preparing at-risk women for the possible challenges that come along with parenthood.
- Published
- 2016
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