| Literature DB >> 34210369 |
Livio Provenzi1, Serena Grumi1, Lilia Altieri2, Giulia Bensi3, Emanuela Bertazzoli4, Giacomo Biasucci3, Anna Cavallini5, Lidia Decembrino2, Rossana Falcone2, Anna Freddi6, Barbara Gardella7, Roberta Giacchero4, Roberto Giorda8, Elena Grossi3, Paola Guerini2, Maria Luisa Magnani2, Paola Martelli9, Mario Motta9, Renata Nacinovich5,10, Dario Pantaleo2, Camilla Pisoni7, Federico Prefumo9,11, Laura Riva6, Barbara Scelsa6, Maria V Spartà4, Arsenio Spinillo7,12, Patrizia Vergani5,13, Simona Orcesi1,12, Renato Borgatti1,12.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic is a global traumatic experience for citizens, especially during sensitive time windows of heightened plasticity such as pregnancy and neonatal life. Pandemic-related stress experienced by mothers during pregnancy may act as an early risk factor for infants' regulatory capacity development by altering maternal psychosocial well-being (e.g., increased anxiety, reduced social support) and caregiving environment (e.g., greater parenting stress, impaired mother-infant bonding). The aim of the present longitudinal study was to assess the consequences of pandemic-related prenatal stress on infants' regulatory capacity. A sample of 163 mother-infant dyads was enrolled at eight maternity units in northern Italy. They provided complete data about prenatal stress, perceived social support, postnatal anxiety symptoms, parenting stress, mother-infant bonding, and infants' regulatory capacity at 3 months of age. Women who experienced emotional stress and received partial social support during pregnancy reported higher anxious symptoms. Moreover, maternal postnatal anxiety was indirectly linked to the infants' regulatory capacity at 3 months, mediated by parenting stress and mother-infant bonding. Dedicated preventive interventions should be delivered to mothers and should be focused on protecting the mother-infant dyad from the detrimental effects of pandemic-related stress during the COVID-19 healthcare emergency.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; anxiety; epidemic; maternal bonding; prenatal stress; regulatory capacity; social support; temperament
Year: 2021 PMID: 34210369 DOI: 10.1017/S0954579421000766
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Psychopathol ISSN: 0954-5794