journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38140832/infant-massage-as-a-stress-management-technique-for-parents-of-hospitalized-extremely-preterm-infants
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dana McCarty, Rachel Silver, Lauren Quinn, Stacey Dusing, Thomas Michael O'Shea
Mothers of infants born extremely preterm requiring prolonged medical intervention in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) are at high risk of developing stress. Parent-administered infant massage is a well-established, safe intervention for preterm infants with many developmental benefits, but the published literature has mostly examined its impact on infants and parents through self-reported or observational measures of stress. The aim of this study was to measure salivary cortisol, a biomarker for stress, in extremely preterm infants and their mothers immediately pre and post parent-administered infant massage in order to detect potential changes in physiologic stress...
January 2024: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38091258/predicting-attachment-in-portuguese-infants-born-very-or-extremely-preterm-understanding-the-roles-of-infant-regulatory-behavior-maternal-sensitivity-and-risk-factors
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sandra Antunes, Maria João Alves, Inês Martelo, Marjorie Beeghly, Luísa Barros, Marina Fuertes
A growing body of research shows that early attachment relationships are foundational for children's later developmental and psychosocial outcomes. However, findings are mixed regarding whether preterm birth predicts later attachment, but insecurity is generally more prevalent among infants at higher medical and/or social/familial risk. This longitudinal study aimed to identify specific relational, familial/demographic, and perinatal predictors of attachment in a sample of 63 Portuguese infants born very or extremely preterm (VEPT, <32 gestational weeks) and their mothers from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds...
December 13, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38081788/movement-through-motherhood-exploring-mood-wellbeing-and-prenatal-emotional-availability-ea-through-ea-based-dance-intervention
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katelyn Branson Dame, Madeline Jazz Harvey, Stephen Aichele, Ann Kralewski Van Denburg, Lillian Hoyer, Steffany Joslin, Alexandria McKenna, Michael Lincoln, Lia Closson, Marjo Flykt, Saara Salo, Ashley Harvey, Zeynep Biringen
Emotional availability (EA) is a construct that describes the observed emotional connection in parent-child relationships. During pregnancy, EA is assessed only using caregiver sensitivity and nonhostility. We used the nonverbal aspects of these qualities to create a new dance/movement intervention ("EA-Based Dance Intervention"). Given the scarcity of pregnancy interventions, we provided training to participants on how to be emotionally engaged with their unborn babies through dance/movement. The EA-Based Dance Intervention alone comprised the first intervention arm (n = 12)...
December 11, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38053329/psychometrics-of-psychosocial-behavior-items-under-age-6%C3%A2-years-evidence-from-nebraska-usa
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marcus R Waldman, Abbie Raikes, Katelyn Hepworth, Maureen M Black, Vanessa Cavallera, Tarun Dua, Magdalena Janus, Susanne P Martin-Herz, Dana C McCoy, Ann M Weber
Because healthy psychosocial development in the first years of life is critical to lifelong well-being, governmental, and nongovernmental organizations are increasingly interested in monitoring psychosocial behaviors among populations of children. In response, the World Health Organization is developing the Global Scales of Early Development Psychosocial Form (GSED PF) to facilitate population-level psychosocial monitoring. Once validated, the GSED PF will be an open-access, caregiver-reported measure of children's psychosocial behaviors that is appropriate for infants and young children...
December 5, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38049946/do-toys-get-in-the-way-the-duration-of-shared-emotional-experiences-is-longer-when-mothers-engage-their-infants-without-toys
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sheila R Sjolseth, Cynthia A Frosch, Margaret Tresch Owen, Samantha L Redig
During mother-infant interaction, shared emotional experiences, defined as reciprocal and synchronous emotional sharing between mother and infant, are an indicator of early relational health. Yet, it is unclear how mothers' efforts to engage with their infants relate to dyadic-level shared emotional experiences. Utilizing a sample of 80 randomly selected videos of the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development, we examined how mothers' bids for interaction with their 6-month-old infants related to the duration of shared emotional experiences...
December 4, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38038186/reflective-supervision-and-reflective-practice-in-infant-mental-health-a-scoping-review-of-a-diverse-body-of-literature
#26
REVIEW
Mary Tobin, Síle Carney, Elaine Rogers
Reflective practice is a core component of Infant Mental Health (IMH) training and work in the form of reflective supervision/consultation (RS/C). RS/C supports and facilitates relationship-based practice, and is considered to help prevent burnout and promote work satisfaction. In response to an identified gap in empirical research on RS/C, this scoping review aimed to give an overview of the broad range of study designs and outcomes by systematically charting empirical studies on RS/C in IMH-based work with children and families...
December 1, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37919260/what-is-typical-atypical-in-young-children-s-attention-regulation-characterizing-the-developmental-spectrum-with-the-multidimensional-assessment-profiles-attention-regulation-infant-toddler-maps-ar-it-scale
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Amanda N Nili, Meghan Miller, Yudong Zhang, Philip R Sherlock, James L Burns, Anne Zola, Aaron Kaat, Lauren S Wakschlag, Sheila Krogh-Jespersen
While attention dysregulation is a promising early indicator of neurodevelopmental risk, in particular attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), it is difficult to characterize clinical concern due to its developmental expectability at the transition to toddlerhood. Thus, explicating the typical:atypical continuum of risk indicators is among the key future directions for research to promote early identification and intervention, and prevent decrements in the attainment of developmental milestones into early childhood...
November 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37872701/looking-back-to-light-the-path-forward-ghosts-in-the-nursery-revisited
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Arietta Slade
The infant health movement was launched nearly 50 years ago with the publication of the now classic paper, Ghosts in the Nursery: A psychoanalytic approach to the problems of impaired infant-mother relationships, written by Selma Fraiberg, Edna Adelson, and Vivian Shapiro (1975). This paper offers us lessons for infant mental health practice that have been proven true time and again over the last 50 years. These lessons both underscore the factors essential to clinical progress across a range of interventions, and remind us of the significant challenges we face in these times of massive, global trauma and oppression, extreme economic hardship, and systemic racism...
November 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37899298/cultural-relevance-of-fine-motor-domain-of-the-asq-in-guatemala
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Abigail S Angulo, Maureen Cunningham, Gretchen Domek, Sandra Friedman, Ayelet Talmi
Previous research suggests that the Ages and Stages Questionnaire-3rd ed. (ASQ) fine motor domain (FMD) may not be culturally relevant for developmental screening in a rural Guatemalan community, as the FMD accounts for 40% of all abnormal screenings after a needs assessment in this community. We hypothesize this is due to a lack of exposure to objects assessed in the questionnaire, such as blocks or light switches. The FMD scores of rural Guatemalan children (n = 56) participating in a child development program were compared with Spanish- and English-speaking Latinx-American children attending a US primary care clinic and screened at yearly well-child checks...
October 29, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37815538/preterm-infant-mental-health-in-the-neonatal-intensive-care-unit-a-review-of-research-on-nicu-parent-infant-interactions-and-maternal-sensitivity
#30
REVIEW
Georgina Hartzell, Richard J Shaw, Soudabeh Givrad
Caregiving relationships in the postnatal period are critical to an infant's development. Preterm infants and their parents face unique challenges in this regard, with infants experiencing separation from parents, uncomfortable procedures, and increased biologic vulnerability, and parents facing difficulties assuming caregiver roles and increased risk for psychological distress. To better understand the NICU parent-infant relationship, we conducted a review of the literature and identified 52 studies comparing observed maternal, infant, and dyadic interaction behavior in preterm dyads with full-term dyads...
October 10, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37660258/childhood-maltreatment-history-and-trauma-specific-predictors-of-parenting-stress-in-new-fathers
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Josephine R Granner, Shawna J Lee, Jade Burns, Todd I Herrenkohl, Allison L Miller, Julia S Seng
For new fathers, parenting stress is a risk factor for impaired early parenting and child maltreatment perpetration. Predictors of parenting stress, including fathers' own experiences of trauma, could be useful intervention targets to support new fathers. We aim to examine associations between new fathers' own histories of child maltreatment, and their perinatal mental health, relationships, and parenting stress. We recruited 298 first-time fathers for a survey that measured child maltreatment history, trauma sequelae including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), major depressive disorder (MDD), interpersonal reactivity, substance use, anger expression, coparenting quality, and parenting stress...
September 2, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37608513/framing-the-work-a-coparenting-model-for-guiding-infant-mental-health-engagement-with-families
#32
REVIEW
James McHale, Herve Tissot, Silvia Mazzoni, Monica Hedenbro, Selin Salman-Engin, Diane A Philipp, Joëlle Darwiche, Miri Keren, Russia Collins, Erica Coates, Martina Mensi, Antoinette Corboz-Warnery, Elisabeth Fivaz-Depeursinge
When working with families of infants and toddlers, intentionally looking beyond dyadic child-parent relationship functioning to conceptualize the child's socioemotional adaptation within their broader family collective can enhance the likelihood that clinical gains will be supported and sustained. However, there has been little expert guidance regarding how best to frame infant-family mental health therapeutic encounters for the adults responsible for the child's care and upbringing in a manner that elevates their mindfulness about and their resolve to strengthen the impact of their coparenting collective...
August 22, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37608475/risk-factors-associated-with-higher-scores-in-internalizing-and-externalizing-behaviors-in-chilean-preschoolers
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paula Bedregal, Victoria Lermanda, Rodrigo Sierra, Paola Viviani
Early detection of behavioral disorders in children is necessary for intervention. Available data show a high prevalence of child and adolescent psychiatric disorders in Chile (22.5%), but behavioral problems in younger children have not been evaluated. This work assesses behavioral disorders in preschoolers and their association with sociodemographic variables of the family and the child. The data was collected during the impact assessment of the Biopsychosocial Development Support Program "Chile Crece Contigo", using a multistage and representative random sample of 1377 preschoolers, aged between 30 and 48 months, who attended public health services...
August 22, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37607042/parental-sensitivity-family-alliance-and-infants-vagal-tone-influences-of-early-family-interactions-on-physiological-emotion-regulation
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Valentine Rattaz, Hervé Tissot, Nilo Puglisi, Chantal Razurel, Manuella Epiney, Nicolas Favez
In this study, we investigated the influence of parental sensitivity and family alliance on infants' vagal tone, considered as a physiological indicator of emotion regulation. Studies on mother-infant interactions have shown that vagal tone can be influenced by the quality of the interaction, such as interacting with a sensitive mother. To date, no study has investigated the influence of paternal sensitivity or family alliance on infants' vagal tone. We hypothesized that maternal sensitivity, paternal sensitivity, and family alliance would be associated with infants' vagal tone during dyadic and triadic interactions...
August 22, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37553902/enhancing-early-parenting-in-the-community-preliminary-results-from-a-learning-collaborative-approach-to-scale-up-attachment-and-biobehavioral-catch-up
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Karen Appleyard Carmody, Kathryn J Murray, Breanna Williams, Allison Frost, Cheri Coleman, Kelly Sullivan
Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-up (ABC) is a promising home-visiting intervention promoting sensitive caregiving and secure parent-child attachment in families with young children. The goal of this study was to examine a learning collaborative approach to disseminating ABC in a community setting. Training outcomes (e.g., trainee completion, satisfaction, effectiveness of training methods) and intervention outcomes (e.g., parent behavior, parent beliefs, child socioemotional development) were examined. Eighteen practitioners participated in the ABC learning collaborative; 13 completed training...
August 8, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37552614/art-at-the-start-a-controlled-trial-and-close-observation-of-parent-infant-art-therapy-intervention
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Victoria Gray Armstrong, Josephine Ross
This two-part study seeks to evidence art therapy intervention for parent-infant attachment relationships, looking at improvements to wellbeing and relationships. Study one was a controlled trial with 105 participating parent/caregivers and their infants (0-3-years), identified due to concerns about their relationship. They were quasi-randomized to attend a 12-week art therapy group or treatment as usual. Measures focused on parents' wellbeing and their perceptions of their relationship with their infant. In study 2 we analyzed video footage from the first and penultimate sessions of a sample of 37 dyads, looking for observable changes in the different channels of communication upon which attachments are predicated...
August 8, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37537782/reflective-supervision-and-consultation-and-its-impact-within-early-childhood-serving-programs-a-systematic-review
#37
REVIEW
Lindsay Huffhines, Rachel Herman, Rebecca B Silver, Christine M Low, Rebecca Newland, Stephanie H Parade
Reflective supervision and consultation (RS/C) is regarded as best practice within the infant/early childhood mental health field. Benefits of RS/C on the early childhood workforce and children and families have been demonstrated through case studies, conceptual pieces, and individual research studies. However, findings across studies have not been summarized using gold-standard methodology, thus the state of existing empirical support for RS/C is unclear. This systematic review examined the collective evidence for RS/C across diverse early childhood-serving programs...
August 3, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37528631/relationship-focused-mother-infant-groups-preliminary-evaluation-of-improvements-in-maternal-mental-health-parenting-confidence-and-parental-reflective-functioning
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sharon Cooke, Dawson Campbell Cooke, Yvonne Hauck
We report on two preliminary evaluations of a group intervention, targeting vulnerable infants and their mothers within the first 6-months postpartum. The Mother-Baby Nurture® program aims to strengthen the developing infant-mother attachment relationship by increasing maternal mentalizing. These studies were undertaken with pre-post evaluations with the mothers of infants under 10-months of age. The mother-infant dyads participated in ten 2-h group sessions. Study one (N = 69 dyads) included self-reported maternal depression, anxiety, and parenting confidence...
August 1, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37483087/current-approaches-and-future-directions-for-addressing-ethics-in-infant-and-early-childhood-mental-health
#39
REVIEW
Paula D Zeanah, Alison Steier, Izaak Lim, Jon Korfmacher, Charles H Zeanah
In this paper, we consider whether the field of infant and early childhood mental health (IECMH) needs its own code of ethics. We begin by describing unique features of infant and early childhood mental health (IECMH) and the diverse strategies that the field has developed to address complex clinical dilemmas, among them workforce development, clinical supports, policy statements, and statements of ethical values. Because of the field's interdisciplinary nature, we also consider how various contributing professions and organizations address ethical issues...
July 22, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37422890/patient-navigation-models-for-mental-health-of-parents-expecting-or-caring-for-an-infant-or-young-child-a-systematic-review
#40
REVIEW
Sophia A Harris, Michelle Harrison, Karen Hazell-Raine, Catherine Wade, Valsamma Eapen, Jane Kohlhoff
Patient navigation (PN) aims to improve timely access to healthcare by helping patients to "navigate" complex service provision landscapes. PN models have been applied in diverse healthcare settings including perinatal mental health (PMH). However, the practice models and implementation of PN programs vary widely, and their impact on engagement with PMH services has not been systematically investigated. This systematic narrative review study aimed to (1) identify and describe existing PMH PN models, (2) understand their effectiveness in improving service engagement and clinical outcomes, (3) review patient and provider perceptions, and (4) explore facilitators and barriers to program success...
July 9, 2023: Infant Mental Health Journal
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