Maternal childhood trauma and prenatal stressors are associated with child behavioral health

Maternal adversity and prenatal stress confer risk for child behavioral health problems. Few studies have examined this intergenerational process across multiple dimensions of stress; fewer have explored potential protective factors. Using a large, diverse sample of mother–child dyads, we examined a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of developmental origins of health and disease 2022-08, Vol.13 (4), p.483-493
Hauptverfasser: Ahmad, Shaikh I., Rudd, Kristen L., LeWinn, Kaja Z., Mason, W. Alex, Murphy, Laura, Juarez, Paul D., Karr, Catherine J., Sathyanarayana, Sheela, Tylavsky, Frances A., Bush, Nicole R.
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container_end_page 493
container_issue 4
container_start_page 483
container_title Journal of developmental origins of health and disease
container_volume 13
creator Ahmad, Shaikh I.
Rudd, Kristen L.
LeWinn, Kaja Z.
Mason, W. Alex
Murphy, Laura
Juarez, Paul D.
Karr, Catherine J.
Sathyanarayana, Sheela
Tylavsky, Frances A.
Bush, Nicole R.
description Maternal adversity and prenatal stress confer risk for child behavioral health problems. Few studies have examined this intergenerational process across multiple dimensions of stress; fewer have explored potential protective factors. Using a large, diverse sample of mother–child dyads, we examined associations between maternal childhood trauma, prenatal stressors, and offspring socioemotional-behavioral development, while also examining potential resilience-promoting factors. The Conditions Affecting Neurocognitive Development and Learning and Early Childhood (CANDLE) study prospectively followed 1503 mother–child dyads (65% Black, 32% White) from pregnancy. Exposures included maternal childhood trauma, socioeconomic risk, intimate partner violence, and geocode-linked neighborhood violent crime during pregnancy. Child socioemotional-behavioral functioning was measured via the Brief Infant Toddler Social Emotional Assessment (mean age = 1.1 years). Maternal social support and parenting knowledge during pregnancy were tested as potential moderators. Multiple linear regressions (N = 1127) revealed that maternal childhood trauma, socioeconomic risk, and intimate partner violence were independently, positively associated with child socioemotional-behavioral problems at age one in fully adjusted models. Maternal parenting knowledge moderated associations between both maternal childhood trauma and prenatal socioeconomic risk on child problems: greater knowledge was protective against the effects of socioeconomic risk and was promotive in the context of low maternal history of childhood trauma. Findings indicate that multiple dimensions of maternal stress and adversity are independently associated with child socioemotional-behavioral problems. Further, modifiable environmental factors, including knowledge regarding child development, can mitigate these risks. Both findings support the importance of parental screening and early intervention to promote child socioemotional-behavioral health.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S2040174421000581
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subjects Adverse Childhood Experiences
Age
Behavior
Child & adolescent mental health
Child Development
Child, Preschool
Children & youth
Childrens health
Domestic violence
Education
Environmental factors
Families & family life
Family income
Female
Health problems
Humans
Infant
Knowledge
Mental health
Mothers
Mothers - psychology
Neighborhoods
Offspring
Original Article
Parenting
Parents & parenting
Pregnancy
Risk Factors
Risk taking
Secondary schools
Sex crimes
Sexual abuse
Social support
Socioeconomic factors
Socioeconomics
Stress
Trauma
Variables
Violence
Violent crime
Womens health
title Maternal childhood trauma and prenatal stressors are associated with child behavioral health
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