EXAMINING THE ADDITIVE INFLUENCE OF PRENATAL RISK FACTORS AND THE POSTNATAL ENVIRONMENT ON INFANT FUNCTIONING
Description
The relations between prenatal risk factors and postnatal risk and protective factors and infant outcomes were examined. Mothers, primarily of low-income background and Latina ethnicity, were interviewed within 24 hours of giving birth, and then again when their infants were five and nine months of age. The relations between prenatal stress, postnatal environment, and infant maturity and temperament were analyzedusing a multiple regression model. We controlled for the covariates: mother's education level and infant's birth weight. Maternal prenatal risk factors predicted lower infant Regulation and lower Developmental Maturity at nine months. Maternal postnatal risks did not predict infant outcomes, but maternal expectations for their child provided a significant association for three of the four infant outcomes: Regulation, Surgency, and Infant Developmental Maturity. The results underscore the importance of prenatal stress holding its significance with the addition of postnatal measures. Future studies would need to explore deeper into a multitude of postnatal factors, in order to accurately portray associations between maternal prenatal stress and infant health.
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2012-05
Agent
- Author (aut): Tran, Melissa
- Thesis director: Lemery-Chalfant, Kathryn
- Committee member: Luecken, Linda
- Committee member: McDonald, Kristy
- Contributor (ctb): Barrett, The Honors College