Abstract

Background: Children born preterm are at high risk for behavior problems at different ages. To better understand these problems, we examine the predictive biopsychosocial variables.
 Objective: To examine the predictive effects of neonatal clinical status and the temperament of the children and mothers on the behavior problems of children born preterm. Study design: Longitudinal predictive study.
 Methods: The sample was composed of 40 children born preterm at 18 to 36 months of age and their mothers. The temperament of the children was assessed using the Early Childhood Behavior Questionnaire, which comprises the negative affect, extroversion and effortful control factors and their domains. Behaviors were assessed using the Child Behavior Checklist 1 ½-5 (total, internalized, and externalized problems scores and classifications). The temperament of the mothers was assessed using the Adult Temperament Questionnaire. All instruments were applied through interviews with mothers. Descriptive and the hierarchical multiple linear regression statistical analyses were performed. The level of significance adopted in the study was p < 0.05.
 Results: The prediction analysis revealed that the internalized behavior problems were explained significantly by children’s temperaments with more fear (negative affect) and less by mothers’ temperament with inhibitory control (effortful control factor). The externalized behavior problems were explained significantly by greater time spent in the neonatal intensive care unit, less effortful control of children’s temperament and less mothers` temperament inhibitory control.
 Conclusion: The behavior problems of children at toddlerhood who were born preterm were explained by high neonatal clinical risk as well as by the temperament dispositional traits of both the children and the mothers.

Highlights

  • Preterm birth represents a high-risk factor for child development in several areas and at different ages[1,2]

  • The prediction analysis revealed that the internalized behavior problems were explained significantly by children’s temperaments with more fear and less by mothers’ temperament with inhibitory control

  • The externalized behavior problems were explained significantly by greater time spent in the neonatal intensive care unit, less effortful control of children’s temperament and less motherstemperament inhibitory control

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Preterm birth represents a high-risk factor for child development in several areas and at different ages[1,2]. With respect to externalized behaviors, attention problems were detected in children born preterm at pre-school age[3,10,11,12] and school age[13,14,15]. There remains a great challenge to understand the mechanisms of these behavior problems in this vulnerable population of children born preterm. Temperament is an individual factor that could represent a relevant key to better understanding the emotional and behavioral problems in children. Temperament refers to individual differences regarding two broad aspects of behavior – as emotional motor and attentional reactivity and as a self-regulatory process that modulates such reactivity[17]. Temperament, which appears early in life, is influenced over time by heredity, maturation, and experience[18]

Methods
Discussion
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