Do psychosocial variables predict the physical growth of infants with orofacial clefts?

J Dev Behav Pediatr

University of Washington School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Seattle 98105, USA.

Published: June 2000

This study sought to determine whether psychosocial variables (parent-infant feeding interactions, infant temperament, maternal social support, family socioeconomic status) are important in predicting the physical growth of infants with orofacial clefts, after controlling for selected medical variables (infant health status, cleft diagnosis, and previous weight). Infant growth (weight-to-height zscores) was tracked for 2 years, and models were developed to predict growth at 3, 12, and 24 months. The authors also examined the growth trajectories of infants with different cleft types: cleft lip and palate (CLP) and cleft palate only (CPO). CPO infants showed some increase in their growth relative to the population mean over time, whereas the growth of CLP infants remained lower than the population mean at all time points. After controlling for medical variables, psychosocial variables collectively accounted for an additional 42% of the variance in infants' growth at 3 months of age, but they did not account for growth at 12 months and 24 months, largely due to the strong effect of previous growth. The authors tentatively conclude that psychosocial variables influence the early growth trajectory of infants with clefts, but subsequent growth becomes increasingly regulated by biological factors.

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