ABSTRACT Background This study examines the transmission of trauma from mother to infant in war trauma contexts. We investigated how maternal exposure to war trauma affects mental health and its association with mother–child interaction quality. We hypothesise that maternal trauma negatively influences these interactions, reducing sensitivity and leading to increased emotional withdrawal and negative emotional states in children. Method Participants were twenty-four mother–infant dyads from Central Africa, Chad, and Cameroon. Mothers were exposed to war trauma before the birth or without direct exposure of the child. Children were aged between 1.5 and 30 months. Maternal mental health problems were indicated by the Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale and the Impact of Event Scale—Revised. Mother–infant interaction quality by the Coding Interactive Behaviour tool. Results The exposure to war trauma was associated with high levels of poor maternal mental health. Mothers showed high levels of post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, and depression, as scored on different scales. This seems to influence the mother–baby interactions which obtain less than optimal scores following the observation and evaluation with the CIB (Maternal sensitivity M 2.7 SD 0.2; Maternal intrusiveness M 2.4, SD 0.1; Dyadic reciprocity M 2.7 SD 0.2; Negative emotional state of the baby M 1.9, SD 0.1; Negative state of the dyad M 2.1, SD 0.1; Baby social engagement M 2.6, SD 0.1). Conclusion The results suggest that maternal exposure to war trauma may impact interaction quality and maternal availability. Inferential statistics indicating low social engagement and negative emotional states in infants suggest potential trauma transmission through interactions with mothers affected by trauma. However, resilience factors may offer some protective effects against this transmission.
Read full abstract