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Maternal touch in caregiving behavior of mothers with and without postpartum depression
Affiliation:1. Baruch Ivcher School of Psychology, Interdsiciplinary Center, Herzila, Israel;2. Department of Psychology and Gonda Brain Science Center, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel;3. Department of Education, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Be''er Sheva, Israel;4. Yale University, Child Study Center, USA;1. VIPER Research Unit, LIFE Department, Royal Military Academy, Brussels, Belgium;2. Experimental and Applied Psychology, Department of Psychology and Educational Sciences, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium;3. Clinical & Lifespan Psychology, Department of Psychology and Educational Sciences, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium;4. School of Natural Sciences & Psychology, Faculty of Science, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, United Kingdom;5. MFYS-BLITS, Human Physiology Department, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium;6. Institute of Psychology, Health & Society, University of Liverpool, UK;7. Cancer in Pregnancy, Department of Gynecological Oncology, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
Abstract:The way a mother touches her infant plays a central role in maternal caregiving behavior. Thus, the purpose of the present study was to examine associations between touch and positive and negative caregiving behavior and whether this association differed in mothers with and without postpartum depression, an episode of depressive disorder following childbirth. Positive caregiving behavior was operationalized as sensitive behavior, i.e. the mother’s ability to notice the child’s signals, interpret these signals correctly and respond to them promptly and appropriately. Negative caregiving behavior was operationalized as overriding behavior, i.e. behavior which disturbs the child’s behavior or redirects the child’s attention to follow the parent’s agenda. Seventy mother-infant dyads (44 in the nonclinical group and 26 in the clinical group) participated in a 10 minutes long mother-infant interaction at four months postpartum. The sample is part of an archival dataset of a longitudinal study investigating the parent-child relationship and child development. Three minutes of the interaction were coded a) microanalytically for touch, using a modified version of the Maternal Touch Scale (Beebe et al., 2010), and b) macroanalytically for sensitive and overriding behavior, using the Coding Interactive Behavior measure (Feldman, 1998). Hierarchical regression analyses with bootstrapping showed that caregiving touch, but not affectionate and static touch, was associated with sensitive behavior across the whole sample. Moreover, playful, but not rough-intrusive touch, was associated with overriding behavior across the whole sample. Associations did not differ between mothers with and without postpartum depression.
Keywords:Touch  Caregiving behavior  Maternal sensitivity  Overriding behavior  Postpartum depression
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