Toddlers whose mothers had active mental health or substance abuse problems one year after giving birth are more likely to have behavior problems
Children whose mothers reported problems
with mental health, substance use, or domestic violence one year
after delivery appear more likely to have behavior problems by age
three years, according to an article in the May issue of Archives
of General Psychiatry.
A mother’s mood and anxiety disorders, smoking,
alcohol abuse, drug use and exposure to domestic violence may contribute
to her children’s behavior problems, according to background information
in the article. Although more than one of these conditions often
occur in the same woman, their combined effects on children have
not been previously studied.
Robert C. Whitaker, MD, MPH, Mathematica Policy Research Inc.,
Princeton, New Jersey, and colleagues followed 2,756 children born
between 1998 and 2000 in 18 large U.S. cities until they were three
years of age. Mothers and fathers each answered survey questions
shortly after their child was born and also completed a follow-up
survey about their well-being one year later.
Mothers’ health conditions were split into three categories: mental
health, substance abuse and domestic violence. Three years later,
researchers surveyed the mothers about their children’s behavior,
asking about instances of aggressive, anxious/depressed or inattention/hyperactive
conduct.
After one year, half of the mothers had a condition in at least
one of the three categories and 22 percent of children had at least
one type of behavior problem. The more areas in which a mother reported
difficulties, the more likely her child was to develop behavior
problems by age three years.
When mothers reported difficulties in zero, one, two or three areas,
reports of aggression among their children at age three years increased
from 7 percent to 12 percent to 17 percent to 19 percent, respectively;
anxiety and depression increased from 9 percent to 14 percent to
16 percent to 27 percent; and inattention and hyperactivity increased
from 7 percent to 12 percent to 15 percent to 19 percent.
The increased risk remained significant even after the researchers
considered other factors, including socio-demographic characteristics
of the family, prenatal habits of the mother and whether the father
had mental health or substance abuse problems.
Because mental health problems, substance abuse and domestic violence
tend to accompany each other and have cumulative negative effects
on children, physicians should provide family-oriented care, the
authors wrote. “Those providing health care to children face many
barriers in identifying and responding to these conditions, but
there is evidence that mothers appear open to empathic inquiries
about how they are doing and that mothers also understand that their
own well-being is related to that of their children,” they write.
“Our study suggests that, by three years of age, there is already
evidence of the effect of adverse childhood experiences, occurring
in this study in the form of parental mental health problems, substance
use and domestic violence,” they concluded. “Whether a clinician
is focused primarily on the care of children, adults or pregnant
women, there is the potential to help disrupt this intergenerational
transmission of poor health.”
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