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Maternal posttraumatic stress symptoms and infant emotional reactivity and emotion regulation
Authors:Bosquet Enlow Michelle  Kitts Robert L  Blood Emily  Bizarro Andrea  Hofmeister Michelle  Wright Rosalind J
Institution:aDepartment of Psychiatry, Children's Hospital Boston, United States;bDepartment of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, United States;cClinical Research Program, Children's Hospital Boston, United States;dDepartment of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, United States;eChanning Laboratory, Department of Medicine, Brigham & Women's Hospital, United States;fDepartment of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, United States
Abstract:The current study examined associations between maternal posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms and infant emotional reactivity and emotion regulation during the first year of life in a primarily low-income, urban, ethnic/racial minority sample of 52 mother–infant dyads. Mothers completed questionnaires assessing their own trauma exposure history and current PTSD and depressive symptoms and their infants’ temperament when the infants were 6 months old. Dyads participated in the repeated Still-Face Paradigm (SFP-R) when the infants were 6 months old, and infant affective states were coded for each SFP-R episode. Mothers completed questionnaires assessing infant trauma exposure history and infant current emotional and behavioral symptoms when the infants were 13 months old. Maternal PTSD symptoms predicted infants’ emotion regulation at 6 months as assessed by (a) infant ability to recover from distress during the SFP-R and (b) maternal report of infant rate of recovery from distress/arousal in daily life. Maternal PTSD symptoms also predicted maternal report of infant externalizing, internalizing, and dysregulation symptoms at 13 months. Maternal PTSD was not associated with measures of infant emotional reactivity. Neither maternal depressive symptoms nor infant direct exposure to trauma accounted for the associations between maternal PTSD symptoms and infant outcomes. These findings suggest that maternal PTSD is associated with offspring emotion regulation difficulties as early as infancy. Such difficulties may contribute to increased risk of mental health problems among children of mothers with PTSD.
Keywords:Infant  Emotion regulation  Reactivity  Maternal PTSD
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