Adverse Birth Experiences and Parent Adjustment Associated With Atypical Genital Appearance Due to Differences of Sex Development

Author:

Traino Katherine A1,Fisher Rachel S1ORCID,Basile Nathan L1ORCID,Dattilo Taylor M1ORCID,Baskin Laurence S2,Buchanan Cindy L3,Chan Yee-Ming4,Cheng Earl Y5,Coplen Douglas E6,Kolon Thomas F7,Lakshmanan Yegappan8,Palmer Blake W9,Mullins Larry L1,Ciciolla Lucia M1ORCID,Wisniewski Amy B1

Affiliation:

1. Oklahoma State University Department of Psychology, Center for Pediatric Psychology, , USA

2. Department of Urology, University of California San Francisco Medical Center , USA

3. Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus , USA

4. Division of Endocrinology, and Harvard Medical School, Boston Children’s Hospital , USA

5. Department of Urology, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago , USA

6. Division of Urologic Surgery, St. Louis Children’s Hospital , USA

7. Division of Urology, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia , USA

8. Department of Urology, Children’s Hospital of Michigan , USA

9. Department of Pediatric Urology, Cook Children’s Medical Center , USA

Abstract

Abstract Objective Differences/disorders of sex development (DSDs) are rare, congenital conditions involving discordance between chromosomes, gonads, and phenotypic sex and are often diagnosed in infancy. A key subset of parents of children newly diagnosed with a DSD experience clinically elevated distress. The present study examines the relationship between perinatal factors (i.e., gestational age, delivery method) and trajectories of parental adjustment. Methods Parent participants (mothers = 37; fathers = 27) completed measures at baseline, 6- and 12-month follow-up. Multilevel linear regression controlled for clustering of the data at three levels (i.e., time point, parent, and family) and examined the relationship between perinatal factors and trajectories of depressive and anxious symptoms. Two-way interactions between perinatal factors and parent type were evaluated. Results Overall depressive and anxious symptoms decreased over time. There were significant interactions between gestational age and parent type for depressive and anxious symptoms, with younger gestational age having a stronger negative effect on mothers vs. fathers. There was a significant interaction between time and gestational age for depressive symptoms, with 36 weeks’ gestational age demonstrating a higher overall trajectory of depressive symptoms across time compared to 38 and 40 weeks. Findings for the delivery method were not significant. Conclusions Findings uniquely demonstrated younger gestational age was associated with increased depressive symptoms, particularly for mothers compared to fathers. Thus, a more premature birth may predispose parents of infants with DSD to distress. Psychosocial providers should contextualize early diagnosis-related discussions within stressful birth experiences when providing support.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Vaughn Vennerberg II Endowment

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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