| Literature DB >> 29374991 |
Kristin Bernard1, Galia Nissim1, Suzanne Vaccaro1, Jordan L Harris2, Oliver Lindhiem3.
Abstract
Maternal sensitivity plays a central role in shaping children's development across a number of domains, and may be disrupted by depression. The current meta-analysis quantified the magnitude of the association between depression and maternal sensitivity, defined broadly as timely, contingent, and appropriate responding to infants' cues, from birth to 12 months. Across k = 48 studies and n = 4,934 mother-infant dyads, the aggregate effect size between depression and maternal sensitivity was r = -.16, p < .0001, indicating that mothers with higher depression levels were less sensitive than mothers with lower depression levels. Studies that compared a depressed group with a nondepressed/control group had larger effect sizes (r = -.35, p < .0001) than studies that examined depression within a single sample of either unselected cases or clinical-only cases (r = -.11, p < .001), suggesting that clinical levels of depression may pose a particular threat to sensitive parenting. Clinical implications (e.g. screening, prevention) are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Depression; infancy; maternal sensitivity; meta-analysis; parenting
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29374991 DOI: 10.1080/14616734.2018.1430839
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Attach Hum Dev ISSN: 1461-6734