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Comparison of Maternal Perceptions of Preterm and Fullterm Infants

✍ Scribed by Sobotková, Daniela ;Dittrichová, Jaroslava ;Mandys, František


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Weight
511 KB
Volume
5
Category
Article
ISSN
1057-3593

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✦ Synopsis


Instifufe fw the Cure of Mother and Child, Prugue, Czech Republic

We compared maternal attitudes and feelings in two groups of mother-infant dyads: 25 mothers with preterm newborns (M=30.9 weeks of gestational age) and 25 mothers with fullterm newborn uM=39.7 weeks of gestational age). Both groups were matched for infant sex, age (corrected in preterms) and birth order as well as for maternal age and education. Semi-structured interviews were used to collect data on maternal attitudes and feelings about pregnancy and the first contacts with the newborn. Mothers completed rating scales to indicate the specific behavioural problems they perceived in their infants at 6 weeks and 3 months of (corrected) age. Observations of infant responses to visual andlor auditory stimuli were made at 6 weeks and 3 months in a laboratory setting. At 3 months, each infant was administered the Bayley Scale of Mental Development. There were no differences in maternal attitudes and feelings between the two groups of mothers prior to the birth. However, significant differences appeared after birth and indicated increased anxiety in mothers of preterm infants. Significantly more 6-week-old preterm infants were perceived by their mothers as imtable and to cry more than fullterm infants. At the age of 3 months, both groups of infants differed only in terms of imtability. Differences between the two groups of mother-infant dyads, age-related changes in these differences and relationships between maternal evaluations and the laboratory-based assessments are discussed in the context of contrasts in the stability of behavioural regulation in preterm and fullterm infants.


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