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Maternal versus child risk and the development of parent–child and family relationships in five high-risk populations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2007

RUTH FELDMAN
Affiliation:
Bar-Ilan University, Israel

Abstract

Individual, dyadic, and triadic influences on the development of the family system were examined in the context of developmental risk. Participants were 145 couples and their 4-month-old first-born child in six groups: controls, three mother-risk groups (depressed, anxious, comorbid), and two infant-risk groups (preterm, intrauterine growth retardation). Dyadic and triadic interactions were observed. Differences in parent–infant reciprocity and intrusiveness were found, with mother-risk groups scoring less optimally than controls and infant-risk groups scoring the poorest. Similar results emerged for family-level cohesion and rigidity. Structural modeling indicated that father involvement had an influence on the individual level, by reducing maternal distress, as well as on the triadic level, by increasing family cohesion. Maternal emotional distress affected the reciprocity component of early dyadic and triadic relationships, whereas infant negative emotionality impacted on the intrusive element of parenting and family-level relationships. Discussion considered the multiple and pattern-specific influences on the family system as it is shaped by maternal and child risk conditions.This study was supported by the Israeli Science Foundation (No. 01/945) and the March of Dimes Foundation (12-FY04-50).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2007 Cambridge University Press

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