| Literature DB >> 32576260 |
C Lau1, M R Turcich2, E O Smith2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Maternal stress following the birth of an infant is well acknowledged. It is particularly so when infants are born prematurely as their mothers cannot fully take on their parenting role until their infant(s) is discharged from neonatal intensive care units (NICUs). In this exploratory study, we examined whether these mothers' parenting stress would lessen during their first-year reunification with their infant(s) as they settle into motherhood at home.Entities:
Keywords: Maternal stress perception; Parenting[al] Stress Index [stress index]; Preterm mother-infant dyad
Year: 2020 PMID: 32576260 PMCID: PMC7313173 DOI: 10.1186/s40359-020-00435-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychol ISSN: 2050-7283
Parenting[al] Stress Index (PSI) subscales
Distractibility/ Hyperactivity (DI) | High raw scores associated with behaviors, e.g., overactivity, restlessness, distractibility, short attention span, does not seem to listen, or Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity. |
| Adaptability (AD) | High raw scores associated with characteristics that make parenting task more difficult due to child’s inability to adjust to changes in physical or social environment |
| Reinforces Parent (RE) | High raw score associated with parents not experiencing positive reinforcement from child |
| Demandingness (DE) | High raw scores associated with parent experiencing child as placing many demands |
| Mood (MO) | High raw scores associated with child whose affective functioning shows evidence of dysfunction |
| Acceptability (AC) | High raw scores associated with child’s physical, intellectual and emotional characteristics that do not match parental expectations |
| Child Domain (CD) | Total stress raw score of above Child Subscales |
| Competence (CO) | High raw scores may be due to factors such as parent’s real or perceived inability to care for child, lack of acceptance/criticism from spouse, first time parent’s inexperience, limited child management skills |
| Isolation (IS) | High raw scores may be associated with social isolation from peers, relatives due to child care |
| Attachment (AT) | High raw scores may be associated with absence of emotional closeness with child, e.g., cold pattern of parent-child interactions, parent’s real or perceived inability to understand child’s feelings and/or needs accurately |
| Health (HE) | High raw scores may suggest deterioration in parental health |
| Role Restriction (RO) | High raw scores suggest parental role as restricting parent’s freedom and frustration in attempting to maintain his/her own identity |
| Depression (DP) | High raw scores are suggestive of significant parental depression |
| Spouse (SP) | High raw scores relate to parents who lack the emotional and active support of the other partner in child management |
| Parental Domain (PD) | Total Stress raw scores of above parental Subscales |
| Total Stress (TS) | Sum of Child and Parental Subscales (CD + PD) |
| Life Stress (LS) | High raw scores relate to current stress experienced outside the parent-child relationships |
Fig. 1PSI profiles of Non-Defensive (ND; black lines) and Defensive (D; grey lines) mothers at 1-month CA (dashed line), 12-month CA (dotted line) and average of both times (solid line); %ile columns: frequency distribution of Abidin’s normative population; Maternal Raw Scores in Child and Maternal Domains; Y-axis: subscales in Child and Maternal Domains; Child and Parent Domain (CD; PD) Total Stress (TS); Life Stress (LS)
Subjects Characteristics
| Maternal- & Infant Demographics | Mothers | Mothers | |
|---|---|---|---|
| n | 25 | 24 | |
| 12 (48%) | 7 (29%) | ns¥ | |
| 31.36 ± 7.13 | 32.08 ± 5.52 | ns# | |
| 2 | 5 | ||
(range) | 28.65 ± 2.45 (24.3–32.9) | 28.30 ± 1.95 (24.3–32.3) | ns# |
(range) | 1177 ± 342 (630–1740) | 1018 ± 243 (599–1585) | ns# |
| 13/12 | 16/10 | ||
| - Caucasian | 52 | 42 | |
| - African-American | 20 | 29 | |
| - Asian | 4 | ns¶ | |
| - Hispanic (white) | 24 | 29 | |
| - Secondary school | 17 | 29 | |
| - University | 57 | 50 | ns¶ |
| - Post-Graduate | 26 | 21 | |
| < $50,000 | 43 | 42 | |
| - $50,000–$99,999 | 30 | 37 | ns¶ |
| - ≥ $100,000 | 26 | 21 | |
aMean ± SD
# Independent t-test: significance at p ≤ 0.05
¶ Chi Square analysis: significance at p ≤ 0.05
¥ WinPEPI (Compare2)
Fig. 2Profile of a ND mother with high stress scores (> 85%ile) for the majority of subscale levels at 1-month CA visit. Raw scores > 99%ile noted above corresponding subscales