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Intelligence and school readiness in preschool children with prenatal drug exposure.
Authors:Margaret B Pulsifer  Krestin Radonovich  Harolyn M E Belcher  Arlene M Butz
Affiliation:Massachusetts General Hospital, Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, 5 Emerson Place, Suite 105, Boston, MA 02114, USA. mpulsifer@partners.org
Abstract:This prospective, longitudinal study examined factors affecting intelligence and school readiness in children 4-5 years of age with prenatal cocaine/opiate exposure. Intelligence and school readiness scores were not significantly different for the drug-exposed group (N = 104) than for unexposed, demographically matched controls (N = 35), although both groups scored slightly below average. Caregivers of drug-exposed children scored significantly lower in intelligence and reading achievement than caregivers of controls; both were below average. Caregiver reading scores accounted for the largest variance in both child intelligence and school readiness; for school readiness, birth weight also contributed but was less important in the model. Neither prenatal drug exposure nor continuing caregiver drug use was significant in the regression analyses. The relationship between child scores and caregiver reading achievement is consistent with studies showing the importance of a stimulating, supportive home environment, and suggests interventions to foster caregiver literacy skills and facilitate caregiver-child cognitive interactions such as reading to the child.
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