A recently developed instrument for the quantification of mother-infant interaction, the Parent-Child Early Relationship Assessement (PCERA), was used to observe drug-abusing mothers and their infants. Compared to the standardization sample used in the development of the PCERA, these drugabusing mot
Sleep Architecture in Infants of Substance-Abusing Mothers
✍ Scribed by Alan Hanft; Melissa Burnham; Beth Goodlin-Jones; Thomas F. Anders
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 133 KB
- Volume
- 27
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0163-9641
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This longitudinal, year-long study compared sleep-wake state organization in two groups of infants-infants whose mothers abused substances during their pregnancies and nonexposed, typically developing, age-matched comparison infants-to determine whether differences in sleep-wake state organization existed between the two groups. Seventeen infants of mothers who were participating in a parent-infant residential treatment program for substance abuse were enrolled. Their sleep-wake state organization over the first year of life was compared to that of 17 age-matched comparison infants. The intent was to follow each infant on five occasions over the first year of life using established methods of time-lapse videosomnography to record sleep-wake state organization; however, attrition in the substance-abusing group was problematic. Some sleep-wake variables (i.e., Active Sleep%, Quiet Sleep%, Awake%, number of nighttime awakenings) were similar for both groups of infants at comparable ages across the first year. Total sleep time and the longest sustained sleep period (sleep continuity variables) differed significantly at some of the ages measured. Although overall sleep architecture appears highly resilient and well organized, some indications of sleep fragmentation and shortened nighttime sleep periods were observed in the substance-exposed infants. More research is needed to explain why sleep-continuity variables and not sleep-state proportion variables differed between the two groups.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract This study examined the association between infant sleeping arrangements (i.e., habitual co‐sleeping, inconsistent co‐sleeping, and non‐co‐sleeping) and quality of mother–infant interaction during play in a sample of mothers, each with a typically developing infant (__N__=70). Mother–in
## Abstract Emotional availability (EA) was investigated among low‐income mothers enrolled in substance‐abuse treatment and their young infants (__n__ = 21) compared with a demographically matched group of mother–infant pairs who, by self‐report, were not at risk for substance abuse (__n__ = 27). T
A residential treatment program has been developed specifically for substance-abusing pregnant and parenting women in Finland, focusing on simultaneously supporting maternal abstinence from substances and the mother-baby relationship. The aims of the study are to explore maternal pre- and postnatal