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Daily articles from HealthDay News: breaking news on health issues, drug approvals and recent discoveries.

Mom's Affection Helps Babies Grow Into Less Stressed Adults


Study finds link between maternal attention, child's mental state decades later

TUESDAY, July 27 (HealthDay News) -- The more a mother showers her infant child with warmth and affection, the less anxiety, hostility and general distress the child will ultimately grow up to harbor as an adult, new research indicates.

The finding is based on the tracking of 482 children from the age of 8 months all the way up to an average age of 34 years. The results suggest that maternal affection at a very young age can have a critical long-range impact on mental health and emotional coping skills.

Study author Joanna Maselko of Duke University and her colleagues report the observations in the July 27 online edition of the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.

All of the study participants were part of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project, which included people born in Providence, R.I. The researchers first assessed the children at 8 months of age in terms of their developmental progress. In turn, the mothers were assessed for their reaction to their child's test results and how well they reacted to their child's exam "performance."

At the same time, the degree of maternal affection and attention displayed toward the children was also assessed, and rated ranging from "negative" to "extravagant" levels, the study authors explained in a news release from the journal's publisher.

Ten percent of the mothers were deemed to have offered their children very low levels of affection, while 85 percent had offered a so-called "normal" degree of warmth. Six percent showered their child with what the investigators determined was a very high amount of maternal affection.

Flash forward a few decades, and the children -- now adults -- were assessed for feelings of anxiety, hostility and general distress levels.

When stacking up maternal affection during infancy against the emotional state of mind of the now fully grown adults, Maselko and her colleagues found that those children who had been exposed to the most affection had the lowest levels of anxiety, hostility and general distress.

By contrast, children who had been exposed to the least amount of affection as infants had the highest degree of those qualities, which can contribute to emotional instability and insecurity, the researchers said.

Maternal affection may enable and promote the healthy development of bonding and emotional attachments, which may help a child to develop social skills that are key to coping with general stress and anxiety, the study authors noted in the news release.

"These findings suggest that early nurturing and warmth have long-lasting positive effects on mental health well into adulthood," the researchers concluded in their report.

More information

For more on infant development, visit the National Network for Child Care.

SOURCE: BMJ journals, news release, July 27, 2010
Copyright © 2010 HealthDay. All rights reserved.
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