AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how maternal mental health affects children's behavioral symptoms, specifically looking at the quality of interactions during feeding.
  • Researchers assessed 150 mother-child pairs when the children were 3 and again at 10 years old, analyzing their feeding interactions through video recordings.
  • Results showed that poorer interaction quality at age 3 was linked to higher rates of behavioral issues in children later, particularly when mothers had high levels of mental health concerns.

Article Abstract

The increased risk of internalizing and externalizing symptoms in children has been observed in the presence of maternal psychopathology. This study aimed to investigate a potential pathway involving the quality of early interactions between mothers and their children. A sample of 150 mother-child dyads underwent assessment when the children were 3 years old and around the age of 10. Video recordings of feeding exchanges between mothers and children were analyzed to evaluate the quality of mother-child interactions. Maternal psychopathology and child internalizing and externalizing symptoms were measured through self-report and report-form measures completed by mothers. The quality of mother-child feeding interactions at three years of age significantly differentiated ( < 0.001), eight years later, between mothers at high and low psychopathological risk and between children exhibiting clinical and subclinical internalizing symptoms. Clinically relevant child symptoms were notably more prevalent when the mother-child interaction quality at three years of age was maladaptive, particularly in the context of concurrent high maternal psychopathological risk. The study findings underscore the importance of focusing on the early quality of mother-child feeding interactions to identify potential situations of maternal and child clinical risk for the development of psychopathological symptoms and to guide preemptive measures and policies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10744080PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm12247668DOI Listing

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