Abstract

BackgroundChronicity and severity of early exposure to maternal common mental disorders (CMD) has been associated with poorer infant development in high-income countries. In low- and middle-income countries (LAMICs), perinatal CMD is inconsistently associated with infant development, but the impact of severity and persistence has not been examined.MethodsA nested population-based cohort of 258 pregnant women was identified from the Perinatal Maternal Mental Disorder in Ethiopia (P-MaMiE) study, and 194 (75.2%) were successfully followed up until the infants were 12 months of age. Maternal CMD was measured in pregnancy and at two and 12 months postnatal using the WHO Self-Reporting Questionnaire, validated for use in this setting. Infant outcomes were evaluated using the Bayley Scales of Infant Development.ResultsAntenatal maternal CMD symptoms were associated with poorer infant motor development ( -0.20; 95% CI: -0.37 to -0.03), but this became non-significant after adjusting for confounders. Postnatal CMD symptoms were not associated with any domain of infant development. There was evidence of a dose-response relationship between the number of time-points at which the mother had high levels of CMD symptoms (SRQ ≥ 6) and impaired infant motor development ( = -0.80; 95%CI -2.24, 0.65 for ante- or postnatal CMD only, = -4.19; 95%CI -8.60, 0.21 for ante- and postnatal CMD, compared to no CMD; test-for-trend χ213.08(1), p < 0.001). Although this association became non-significant in the fully adjusted model, the coefficients were unchanged indicating that the relationship was not confounded. In multivariable analyses, lower socio-economic status and lower infant weight-for-age were associated with significantly lower scores on both motor and cognitive developmental scales. Maternal experience of physical violence was significantly associated with impaired cognitive development.ConclusionsThe study supports the hypothesis that it is the accumulation of risk exposures across time rather than early exposure to maternal CMD per se that is more likely to affect child development. Further investigation of the impact of chronicity of maternal CMD upon child development in LAMICs is indicated. In the Ethiopian setting, poverty, interpersonal violence and infant undernutrition should be targets for interventions to reduce the loss of child developmental potential.

Highlights

  • Chronicity and severity of early exposure to maternal common mental disorders (CMD) has been associated with poorer infant development in high-income countries

  • There is evidence indicating that maternal common mental disorders (CMD), in particular depressive and anxiety disorders, pose a serious public health concern because of their adverse effect on infant development [1,2]

  • All infants exposed to high levels of antenatal CMD symptoms (≥6 on the SelfReporting Questionnaire-20 (SRQ) [24]) (n = 68) and a random sub-sample of infants exposed to moderate (SRQ score 2 to 5; n = 95/227) and low (SRQ score 0 or 1; n = 95/260) antenatal CMD symptoms were selected for assessment

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Summary

Introduction

Chronicity and severity of early exposure to maternal common mental disorders (CMD) has been associated with poorer infant development in high-income countries. In low- and middle-income countries (LAMICs), perinatal CMD is inconsistently associated with infant development, but the impact of severity and persistence has not been examined. There is evidence indicating that maternal common mental disorders (CMD), in particular depressive and anxiety disorders, pose a serious public health concern because of their adverse effect on infant development [1,2]. Infants of mothers with CMD have been found to have poorer motor, cognitive and socio-emotional recent review [14] argued that the children most at risk of developmental deficits are those of mothers exhibiting depressed mood throughout their early childhood years. Socio-economic factors and infant male sex appear to exacerbate the effect of maternal CMD [8,12,15,16,17,18]

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