| Literature DB >> 32295106 |
Andrzej Śliwerski1, Karolina Kossakowska1, Karolina Jarecka1, Julita Świtalska1, Eleonora Bielawska-Batorowicz1.
Abstract
Aims and objectives: The aim of this systematic review was to summarize the key findings of empirical studies assessing the influence of maternal depression on child attachment security measured before 24 months after birth. Method: The study followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) statement guidelines. A literature search was conducted on the EBSCO (Academic Search Complete; Health Source: Nursing/Academic Edition; MEDLINE; PsycARTICLES) and PubMed databases, with infant attachment AND depression as search terms with Boolean operators. Study design or sample size did not affect inclusion. After screening, 29 of the 1510 unique publications originally identified were included in the review.Entities:
Keywords: infant attachment; major depression; maternal depression; postnatal depression; prenatal depression; systematic review
Year: 2020 PMID: 32295106 PMCID: PMC7216154 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17082675
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flowchart of the search and systematic review process.
Details of the studies measuring the impact of maternal depression on attachment security which used the clinical interview to diagnose depression.
| Study (Year), Country | Main Objectives/ | Participant Details/ | Attachment and Depression Measurement: Name of a Tool and the Time When Administered (in Trimester if Prenatally or Months if Postnatally) | Results | Study Quality Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | To examine the role of personality disorders in the association between maternal postpartum depression and infant–mother attachment in a low-risk sample. | Mothers with personality disorders (PD) and mothers from low-risk sample. | SSP: 13 months; | Postpartum depression was associated with attachment insecurity only if the mother also had a personality disorder diagnosis. Infants of depressed mothers without co-morbid personality disorders did not differ from infants of mothers with no psychopathology. These results suggest that co-existing personality disorders may be crucial in understanding how postpartum depression impacts on parenting and infant social-emotional development.. | |
| [ | To examine associations between maternal antenatal depression and infant disorganization at 12 months. A secondary aim was to test the roles of maternal postpartum depression and maternal parenting quality as potential moderators of this association. | Only mothers with at least one major depressive episode before pregnancy. | SSP: 12 months; | Attachment disorganization was strongly correlated with antenatal depression. Maternal parenting quality moderated this association, as exposure to higher levels of maternal depressive symptoms during pregnancy was only associated with higher rates of infant disorganized attachment when maternal parenting at three months was less optimal. No significant effects were found for postpartum depression. | |
| [ | To examine the effects of maternal history of depressive disorder and the effects of depressive symptoms during pregnancy and early postpartum period on attachment insecurity. | A varied and representative sample with socio-economic diversity. | SSP: 14 months; | Insecure and disorganized attachment patterns were not related to maternal lifetime diagnosis of depression regardless of its severity. Higher maternal BSI depression score during pregnancy and BSI/EPDS score during postpartum period were not related to infant-mother attachment insecurity or disorganization at 14 months. | |
| [ | To examine associations between maternal depression and maternal expressed emotion (self-criticism, child-criticism), child internalizing and externalizing behaviors, and attachment insecurity. | Mothers with major depression with at least high-school education and good or very good socio-economic status. | SSP: 20 months; | The depressed and nondepressed groups differed significantly regarding the main study variables, with depressed mothers evidencing higher child-criticism and self-criticism and having toddlers with higher levels of internalizing symptoms, externalizing symptoms, and attachment insecurity. Results revealed that children of mothers with higher self-criticism had a significantly higher probability of being classified as insecurely attached. However, child-criticism was not a significant mediator of the association between maternal depression and child attachment insecurity. | |
| [ | To examine the impact of maternal depression on attachment security and on the representation of the parents by the child. | Mothers with major depression with at least high-school education and good or very good socio-economic status. | SSP: 20 and 36 months; | At 20 and 36 months, the distribution of attachment classifications differed significantly between the depressed and nondepressed groups. Lower rates of secure and higher rates of disorganized attachment were found for the depressed group. | |
| [ | To explore whether a mother’s own state of mind regarding attachment moderated the association between postpartum depression and insecure mother–child attachment. | A varied and representative sample with socio-economic diversity. | SSP: 15 months; | Mothers diagnosed as depressed were more likely to have an insecure state of mind regarding attachment. Infants of chronically depressed mothers were more likely to be insecurely attached. However, the relationship between maternal depression and child attachment was moderated by maternal attachment state of mind. When mothers were depressed and also had an insecure state of mind, their children were highly likely to be insecurely attached. | |
| [ | To evaluate how early disturbances in mother-infant interactions might be related to infant attachment problems. To examine the effect of wider contextual influences on infant attachment, including the mother’s experience of depression (both at 2 and at 18 months), the degree of support she received from her partner and others, and socio-economic status. | Mothers from a high-risk (low income) group. | SSP: 18 months; | Mothers with postpartum depression at two months were more likely to have children who were insecurely attached. Mothers who were less sensitive, more often intrusive, coercive (maternal intrusiveness), and displayed more maternal remoteness at two months postpartum were more likely to have insecurely attached children. Mothers who were less sensitive, highly intrusive-coercive at 18 months of a child’s life also were more likely to have insecurely attached children. Mothers of secure children were more likely to report that they felt supported by their partner than insecure ones. Unwanted pregnancy, unwanted baby, maternal depression at 18 months, remote-disengaged behavior at 18 months were not related to the style of infant attachment. | |
| [ | To examine the effect of postpartum depression on the mother–child relationship. | Mothers with postpartum depression and control group. | SSP: 18 months; | Infants of non-depressed mothers were more likely to be securely attached to their mother. Mild or moderate depressive symptomatology, as detected at three months postpartum, had an impact 15 months later on the child’s development and on mother-child interaction, despite the fact that most mothers no longer presented depressive symptoms at 18 months. Boys were shown to be more resistant than girls. | |
| [ | To examine relations between maternal depression (in pure and comorbid forms) and mother–infant interactions, infant attachment, and toddler social-emotional problems and competencies. | A varied and representative sample with socio-economic diversity. | SSP: 14 months; | A history of depression and other disorders increased risk for infant insecure attachment. Higher incidence of insecure attachment was observed in infants of the comorbid group as compared with infants of the pure depression group and no-psychopathology group, but no differences between the pure depression and no-psychopathology groups were found. | |
| [ | To examine the direct influences of maternal depression on child development, as well as the role of contextual risks that may be particularly heightened in families with depressed parents. | Mothers with at least high-school education and good or very good socio-economic status in relationships with the child’s father. | AQS: NA; | Toddlers with depressed mothers expressed significantly more insecure attachments than did toddlers with non-disordered mothers, and this difference was not accounted for by contextual risk. | |
| [ | To compare the cognitive, social and emotional development of infants of mothers with main depression and/or postpartum depression with that of infants of non-depressed mothers. To assess the impact of the style of interpersonal contact associated with depression (rather than depressive symptoms) on attachment style. | Mothers of healthy borne children with major depression episode and healthy control group. | SSP: 18 months; | Infants whose mothers had been depressed in the postnatal period were significantly more likely to be insecurely attached to their mothers at 18 months than infants of non-depressed mothers. No difference in outcome was found between infants whose mothers had their first episode of depression following childbirth and those who had previous as well as postpartum depression. The duration, severity of the depression and current maternal depression was unrelated to infant outcome. Women who had previous but not postpartum depression were not significantly more likely to have infants who were insecure than women with no history of depression. |
ADS-L—German version of CES-D; AQS—Attachment Behaviour Q-Sort; BDI—Beck Depression Inventory; BSI—Brief Symptom Inventory; CES-D—Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression; CIDI—Composite International Diagnostic Interview; DACL—Depression Adjective Check Lists; EPDS—Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale; HRSD—Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression; IDD—Inventory to Diagnose Depression; PCERA—Parent–Child Early Relational Assessment Scale; PSE—Standardized Psychiatric Interview Present State Examination; SADS-L—Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia; SCID—Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV; SCID-NP—Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV—Non-Patient Version; SPI—Standardized Psychiatric Interview; SSP—Strange Situation Procedure; TAS-45—Toddler Attachment Sort—short version of Attachment Q Sort.
Details of the reviewed studies measuring the impact of maternal depression on attachment security; all used self-report questionnaires to diagnose depression.
| Study (Year), Country | Main Objectives/ | Participant Details/ | Attachment and Depression Measurement: Name of a Tool and the Time When Administered (in Trimester if Prenatally or Months if Postnatally) | Results | Study Quality Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | To investigate the relationships between maternal depression risk and mind-mindedness on infant attachment behavior at one year. | A varied and representative sample with socio-economic diversity. | SSP: 12 months; | Maternal depression risk decreased over the infants’ first year, with the sharpest decline between 6 weeks and 4 months. Mothers at risk of depression when infants were 6 weeks showed less appropriate mind-mindedness at 4 months. The degree of disorganized attachment behavior by the infants at one year was positively associated with the risk of maternal depression at 6 weeks, and negatively associated with maternal appropriate mind-mindedness at 4 months. | |
| [ | To examine the influence of maternal oxytocin receptor (OXTR, rs53576) genotype and cortisol secretion as moderators of the relation between maternal childhood maltreatment history and disorganized mother–infant attachment. | Mothers from low-risk sample, mainly high-educated sample. | SSP: 17 months; | Marital status, employment, age, breast feeding status, self-reported ethnicity, depression, parenting stress and sensitivity, family income, number of siblings and hours per week in out of home care was not associated with attachment disorganization scores. Only infant sex was related to disorganization, insofar that males had higher disorganization scores than females. Maltreatment history more strongly predicted mother-infant attachment disorganization score and disorganized classification for mothers with more plasticity alleles of OXTR (G) and for mothers with higher SSP cortisol secretion, relative to mothers with fewer plasticity alleles and lower SSP cortisol secretion. | |
| [ | To examine the association between multiple forms of early adversity—socioeconomic status disadvantage, familial stress, maternal depression, and security of attachment—and individual differences in a composite measure of pro-inflammatory cytokines and the acute phase protein CRP (C Reactive Protein). | Mothers from psychosocial and/or socio-demographic high-risk groups. | SSP: 17 months; | Higher levels of depressive symptoms and insecure attachment are significantly associated with higher inflammatory load score (ILS). No significant association between maternal depressive symptoms and elevated infant ILS was observed for securely attached infants, whereas insecurely attached infants showed high levels of ILS at high levels of maternal depressive symptoms. Securely attached infants had the least amount of salivary inflammation, regardless of mothers’ levels of depression. Regions of significance analysis indicated that starting at sub-clinical levels of maternal depressive symptoms, infants classified as insecure had significantly higher ILS than all other infants. | |
| [ | To determine whether the sex of an infant influences early vulnerability to maternal psychosocial risk, as indexed by trajectories of maternal depressive symptoms across the first 18 months’ postpartum, and toddlers’ attachment security at 18 months of age. | African American mothers from heterogeneous socio-economic backgrounds. | SSP: 18 months; | Toddlers’ attachment security was significantly and negatively correlated with maternal depressive symptoms at 2, 3 and 6 months, marginally associated with symptoms at 12 months, but not associated with maternal depressive symptoms at 18 months. Boys’ attachment security was significantly and negatively associated with maternal depressive symptoms during the first postpartum year (at 2, 3, 6, and 12 months). Girls’ attachment security was not significantly associated with maternal depressive symptoms at any time of measurement. | |
| [ | To examine the predictors of mother–child interaction quality and child attachment security in a sample of first-time mothers with psychosocial and/or socio-demographic risk factors. | Mothers from psychosocial and/or socio-demographic high-risk groups. | AQS: 18 months; | Attachment security was not significantly associated with young maternal age, single parenting, psychopathological symptoms or low family socio-economic status. When groups were divided according to risk factors (socio-demographic only, psychosocial only, both factors) only socio-demographic factors were significantly associated with attachment security. Postpartum depression showed no association with either mother–child emotional availability or child attachment security. | |
| [ | To examine the extent to which maternal borderline personality pathology and related emotional dysfunction (including emotion regulation difficulties and emotional intensity/reactivity) are connected with infant emotional regulation difficulties. To examine the moderating role of mother–infant attachment in the relations between maternal borderline personality pathology and related emotional dysfunction and infant emotional regulation. | Mothers with borderline personality disorder. | SSP: between 12 and 23 months; | High scores in the depression subscale of DASS correlated positively with a high symptomatology of the borderline personality (BP). No link was found between depressive symptoms and attachment classification. Results suggest that it may be the emotional dysfunction associated with BP, rather than the presence of clinically relevant BP pathology per se, that places infants of mothers with BP pathology at risk of negative outcomes. | |
| [ | To examine the effect of the time of first meeting between mother and very low birth weight (VLBW) newborn on the establishment of a secure attachment behavior; to indicate the role of maternal depression, social support and pregnancy history. | Mothers of very low birth weight (VLBW) newborns. | SSP: 12-18 months c.a. (corrected age); | Not seeing child within 30 min to 3 h after birth and first born child were identified as the best predictors for insecure attachment behavior. Maternal factors including age of the mother, degree of depression at three time points, social support, social status of mother and father, and pregnancy history did not significantly differ between children with secure and insecure attachment. | |
| [ | To determine whether prenatal cortisol exposure predicts infant cognitive development and to evaluate how infant–parent relationship moderates this effect. | A varied and representative sample with socio-economic diversity. | SSP: 17 months; | Cortisol level during pregnancy and postnatal depression were not associated with infant attachment style. Securely attached children had mothers who reported lower levels of postnatal state anxiety. | |
| [ | To examine the associations between household food security (access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food) during infancy and attachment and mental proficiency in toddlerhood. | A varied and representative sample with socio-economic diversity. | TAS-45: 24 months; | Food insecurity has no significant direct association with being insecurely attached. Instead, food insecurity works indirectly through depression and parenting practices to influence insecure attachment. Attachment insecurity is positively associated with depression. | |
| [ | To replicate the finding that a significant association exists between maternal state of mind, maternal sensitivity, and infant attachment security, but also that maternal sensitivity only partially mediates the association between maternal state of mind and infant attachment. The second objective was to consider whether paths to infant attachment security may exist that do not originate with maternal state of mind. | Adolescent mothers up to 19 years old. | AQS: 15 and 18 months; | Significant (but weak) associations were documented between maternal attachment state of mind and maternal sensitivity, as well as between maternal sensitivity and infant security. Association between maternal sensitivity and attachment security remained significant even when other variables were statistically controlled. A marginal link was observed between maternal depression and infant attachment security. Furthermore, there was no association between depression and maternal sensitivity. | |
| [ | To predict attachment classifications from: (a) relevant control variables (socio-economic status, marital relation, knowledge of infant development), (b) a maternal variable (sensitivity or depression) or child variable (gender or temperament), (c) a childcare variable (type of care at 12 months, amount of nonmaternal care, age of entry into nonmaternal care, stability of care, different types of care, and infant–adult ratio), and (d) the interaction between the two selected (mother/child and child-care) variables. | Jewish mothers of healthy children with socio-economic diversity. | SSP: 12 months; | Center-care adversely increased the likelihood of infants developing insecure attachment to their mothers as compared to infants who were either in maternal care, individual non-parental care with a relative, individual nonparental care with a paid caregiver, or family day-care. Mothers found to be more sensitive were more likely to have securely attached infants regardless of care type (maternal, family, nanny etc.). Maternal depression, child’s gender, temperament, age (in weeks) when nonmaternal care was introduced, length of extra care (3–12 months), stability of care were not found to be significant predictors of attachment security/insecurity. | |
| [ | To explore the long-term impact of depressive symptomatology on mother–child interaction and on infant attachment to mothers. | No adequate information about studied sample. | PCERA: 15 and 18 months; | Children of mothers with high EPDS scores were less curious and focused on free play situations than children of low EPDS scorers. Even if the proportion of insecurely attached children did not differ between high and low EPDS groups, those children who had mothers in the high-scoring group were more likely to show restricted levels of joy in their secure attachment behaviours. | |
| [ | To determine whether experience of loss may lead to unresolved state of mind in a mother, and whether this is associated with increasing rates of disorganization of infant attachment patterns among infants born subsequent to stillbirth. To determine whether disorganized infant attachment could be predicted by maternal symptoms of depression or anxiety, by social disadvantage, by additional experience of miscarriage or termination of pregnancy, or by whether or not the mother had seen and held her stillborn infant and had held a funeral for the infant. | Mothers who have experienced a stillbirth (after 18 month of gestation) before their current pregnancy and a control group. | SSP: 12 months; | Infants next-born after a stillbirth were significantly more likely to have disorganized attachment style than control infants. Maternal depression was not associated with child attachment style. | |
| [ | To explore the effects of marital separation and divorce on psychological development of children in the first 3 years of life. To examine the consequences of marital separation on children’s functioning immediately after separation and to assess whether maternal background before and after marital separation may affect studied variables. | A varied and representative sample with socio-economic diversity. | SSP: 15 and 36 months; | Children in 2-parent families performed better than children in 1-parent families on assessments of cognitive and social abilities, problem behavior, attachment security, and behavior with mother. However, controlling for maternal education and family income reduced these differences, and associations with separated-intact marital status were non-significant. Hence, child psychological development was not affected by parental separation per se; it was related to maternal income, education, ethnicity, child- rearing beliefs, depressive symptoms, and behavior. Maternal depression increased behavioral problems of the child, but did not affect the security of attachment style. | |
| [ | To assess whether a family in high-risk circumstances (combined effects of poverty, maternal depression, and caretaking inadequacy) could benefit from family support services. | Mothers from a high-risk (low income) group and controls. | SSP: 12 months; | The negative effects of social risk status were more pervasive in regard to infant attachment security than in regard to mental development, with the unsupported high-risk group as a whole differing significantly both from the supported high-risk group. Unsupported high-risk infants had a very high rate of insecure-disorganized attachment, 60%, compared to 29% for high-risk infants supported by family services and 28% for community infants. | |
| [ | To examine the predictors of mother–child interaction quality and child attachment security in a sample of first-time mothers with psychosocial and/or socio-demographic risk factors. | Married mothers. | SSP: 16 and 40 months; | Insecure infant attachment at 16 months was associated with maternal perception of overcontrol, depressed mood state, and aversive conditioning to impending cries in a laboratory task at the 5-month period. Mothers of insecurely-attached infants were more depressed at 5 (but not 16) months than mothers of securely attached infants. | |
| [ | To examine whether maternal depression is a risk factor for infant development, as well as for childhood psychopathology, and whether maternal depression affect the security of attachment at twelve months of age in a low-income sample. | Mothers from high-risk (low income) group. | SSP: 12 months; | Depressed and non-depressed mothers did not differ in incidence of insecure infant attachment, nor did the maternal depression scores correlate with infant reunion behaviors in the strange situation, including infant avoidance or resistance at reunion. Mothers reporting mild to moderate depression were more likely to have securely attached infants, while mothers reporting severe depression were more likely to have infants showing unstable avoidant attachment. More surprisingly, mothers reporting the least frequent depressive symptoms were more likely to have avoidant infants. |
ADS-L—German version of CES-D; AQS—Attachment Behaviour Q-Sort; BD—Beck Depression Inventory; BSI—Brief Symptom Inventory; CES-D—Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression; CIDI—Composite International Diagnostic Interview; DACL—The Depression Adjective Check Lists; EPDS—Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale; HRSD—Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression; IDD—Inventory to Diagnose Depression; PCERA—The Parent-Child Early Relational Assessment Scale; PSE—Standardized Psychiatric Interview Present State Examination; SADS-L—Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia; SCID—Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV; SCID-NP—Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV—Non-Patient Version; SPI—Standardized Psychiatric Interview; SSP—Strange Situation Procedure; TAS-45—Toddler Attachment Sort—short version of Attachment Q Sort.