Infants of mothers with early remitted clinical depression and mothers with no postpartum depression: Adaptive functioning in the second year of life

Author:

Bornstein Marc H.123ORCID,Manian Nanmathi14,Henry Lauren M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Bethesda Maryland USA

2. Institute for Fiscal Studies London UK

3. UNICEF New York New York USA

4. University of Maryland Baltimore County Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractWhether and how remitted clinical depression in postpartum motherhood contributes to poor infant adaptive functioning is inconclusive. The present longitudinal study examines adaptive functioning in infants of mothers diagnosed as clinically depressed at 5 months but remitted at 15 and 24 months. Fifty‐five U. S. mothers with early, remitted clinical depression and 132 mothers without postpartum depression completed the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales about their infants at 15 and 24 months. Between groups, mothers were equivalent in age, ethnicity, marital status, and receptive vocabulary (a proxy for verbal intelligence), and infants were equivalent in age and distribution of gender. Controlling for maternal education and parity, mothers with early, remitted clinical depression and mothers with no postpartum depression rated their infants similarly on communication, daily living skills, and socialization. Mothers with early, remitted clinical depression rated their infants poorer in motor skills. Girls were rated more advanced than boys in communication at 24 months and daily living skills at 15 and 24 months. Rated infant adaptive behavior skills increased from 15 to 24 months. With exceptions, adaptive functioning in infants may be robust to early, remitted maternal depression, and adaptive functioning presents a domain to promote positive development in this otherwise vulnerable population.

Funder

European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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