Abstract

Whereas significant advances have been made in understanding how exposure to early adversity "gets under the skin" of children to result in long term changes in developmental outcomes, the processes by which positive social relationships become biologically embedded remain poorly understood. The aim of this study was to understand the pathways by which maternal and infant social environments become biologically embedded in infant cortisol reactivity. Two hundred seventy-two pregnant women and their infants were prospectively assessed during pregnancy and at 6 months postpartum. In serial mediation analyses, higher perceived social support from partners during pregnancy was associated with lower infant cortisol reactivity or larger decreases in cortisol in response to a stressor at 6 months of age via lower self-reported prenatal maternal depression and higher mother-infant interaction quality. The findings add to our understanding of how perinatal social relationships become biologically embedded in child development.

Highlights

  • Biological embedding of perinatal social relationships in infant stress reactivity Jenna C

  • Higher perceived social support in early pregnancy was associated with lower self-reported depression severity during pregnancy, r(266) = -.443, p

  • Mother-infant interaction quality was negatively associated with infant cortisol reactivity, whereby lower quality interactions were associated with higher infant cortisol reactivity, r(269) = -.168, p =

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Biological embedding of perinatal social relationships in infant stress reactivity Jenna C. Whereas significant advances have been made in understanding how exposure to early adversity ‘gets under the skin’ of children to result in long term changes in developmental outcomes, the processes by which positive social relationships become biologically embedded remain poorly understood. When the quality of maternal-infant interactions is low (e.g., low maternal sensitivity or insecure attachment), HPA axis reactivity may be exaggerated and prolonged (Albers et al, 2008; Blair et al, 2008; Blair, Granger, Willoughby, & Kivlighan, 2006) This biological embedding of parent-infant interactions within the infant HPA axis represents a potential pathway by which both supportive and challenging social relationships affect child developmental outcomes and risk for psychopathology.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call