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Biological and Social Cascades of Prenatal Contextual Risk and Maternal Psychological Distress to Early-Childhood Adjustment.

Authors :
Thompson, Stephanie F.
Shimomaeda, Lisa
Calhoun, Rebecca
Metje, Alina
Nurius, Paula S.
Whiley, Dannielle J.
Lengua, Liliana J.
Source :
Developmental Psychology. Sep2024, Vol. 60 Issue 9, p1593-1605. 13p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In the peripartum, putative mechanisms in the transmission of prenatal contextual risk and maternal psychological distress include biological and social processes. In this study, path analyses were used to test unique, cascading pathways of prenatal contextual risk and pre- and postnatal maternal psychological distress through social mediators (parenting) and biological mediators (infant stress physiology) on infant temperament and toddler adjustment. The sample is comprised of racially and ethnically diverse first-time mothers (N = 200) living in low-income contexts (<200% poverty) who were followed from pregnancy to 18–36 months postpartum. In pregnancy, mothers reported contextual risk and psychological distress (anxiety, depression). In the postpartum, mothers reported their psychological distress. At 2–4 months postpartum, observed mother–infant interactions were coded for sensitive responsiveness. Infant cortisol baseline and reactivity to a lab stressor were collected when infants were 4–6 months old. Mothers reported on infant's temperament (negative affect, effortful control) at 10–12 months and on child adjustment (internalizing, externalizing symptoms) at 18–36 months. Prenatal contextual risk predicted infant cortisol reactivity. Prenatal psychological distress predicted postnatal distress but, when accounting for postnatal distress, did not predict putative mediators or indicators of child adjustment. In contrast, maternal postnatal depression predicted subsequent maternal sensitive responsiveness, which in turn predicted later infant baseline cortisol and cortisol reactivity. Baseline cortisol predicted infant negative affectivity, which predicted toddler internalizing and externalizing symptoms. There was no evidence of mediated effects of prenatal variables on child adjustment outcomes, whereas contextual risk, postnatal psychological distress, and parenting were more salient predictors of child adjustment. Public Significance Statement: Children growing up in low-income contexts are more likely to have adjustment problems compared with advantaged peers. The mechanisms of this are not well-understood. This study tests potential contributors to children's adjustment outcomes from pregnancy to toddlerhood, finding that for families living in the context of low income, contextual risk factors, a mother's mental health after giving birth, a child's stress physiology, and parenting behaviors all contribute to children's adjustment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00121649
Volume :
60
Issue :
9
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Developmental Psychology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179293122
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1037/dev0001759