Infant mental health clinicians aiming to improve mother-infant dyads at risk typically target mothers' representations of their infant or mother-infant interactions, assuming that one port of entry leads to change in the other. However, little is known about the relation between changes in mothers' representations and in mother-infant interactions. Therefore, the current study aimed to investigate this in a low- to moderate-risk community sample of 152 mothers (M = 29.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Mothers' representations of their infants are important intervention targets because they predict the observed quality of infant-mother interactions. The current study investigated the influence of a video-feedback infant-parent intervention on mothers' representations of their infants beyond the effect of standard treatment.
Methods: Data from a naturalistic, randomized controlled trial of 152 predominantly low- to moderate-risk mothers (mean age = 29.
The Working Model of the Child Interview (WMCI) is frequently used to measure parents' representations. Beyond the global categories (balanced, disengaged, distorted), the reliability, factor structure, and validity of all the 15 clinical scales have not previously been studied. The WMCI was administered to 152 Norwegian mothers of infants (mean age = 7.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF