Unmet Social Needs and Patterns of Hair Cortisol Concentration in Mother-Child Dyads.
Victoria F KeetonJulie T BidwellEuclides José de Mendonça FilhoPatricia P SilveiraDanielle HesslerMatthew S PantellHolly WingErika M BrownBradley IottLaura M GottliebPublished in: Chronic stress (Thousand Oaks, Calif.) (2023)
Mother-child dyads experience synchronous patterns of physiologic stress, and an increasing number of unmet social needs is associated with a profile of higher dyadic HCC. Interventions aimed at decreasing family-level unmet social needs or maternal stress are, therefore, likely to affect pediatric stress and related health inequities; efforts to address pediatric stress similarly may affect maternal stress and related health inequities. Future research should explore the measures and methods needed to understand the impact of unmet social needs and stress on family dyads.