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Childhood Anxiety: Prenatal Maternal Stress and Parenting in the QF2011 Cohort.

Mia A McLeanVanessa E CobhamGabrielle SimcockBelinda LequertierSue KildeaSuzanne King
Published in: Child psychiatry and human development (2021)
In this study we examine whether specific 'anxiety-maintaining' parenting behaviors (i.e., overinvolvement and/or negativity) exacerbate the effects of disaster-related prenatal maternal stress (PNMS) on school-age anxiety symptoms. Women (N = 230), pregnant at the time of the 2011 Queensland Floods, reported on their experience of flood-related PNMS (objective hardship, cognitive appraisal, subjective distress). At 4-years, mother-child dyads were coded for maternal overinvolvement and negativity during a challenging task; at 6-years mothers reported on their children's anxiety symptoms and their own mood, N = 83. Results showed no associations between PNMS and 6-year anxiety, nor did parenting moderate these effects. Poorer maternal concurrent mood was associated with greater anxiety symptoms at 6 years (β = 0.52). Findings suggest maternal concurrent mood, but not exposure to disaster-related PNMS nor 'anxiety-maintaining' parenting behaviors at preschool age, is related to school-age anxiety symptoms.
Keyphrases
  • sleep quality
  • depressive symptoms
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • birth weight
  • pregnant women
  • physical activity
  • bipolar disorder
  • young adults
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • drug induced
  • high intensity
  • stress induced