In
subsequent studies infant - directed speech has consistently been linked to a child's language skills, which in turn influence IQ, executive function and emotion regulation.
Not exact matches
Looking at preterm birth, which is a risk factor for newborn
infant loss, a 2003
study examined 1,962 women and found that those who reported high counts of anxiety were more likely to experience preterm labor and
subsequent birth.
A
subsequent study from the United Kingdom included additional subjects and additional follow - up assessments at 18 and 30 months.9, 10 Adjusted risk estimates revealed that the risk of ear infections at 18 and 30 months was related to
infant sleeping position at age 1 month.
This prospective cross-sectional
study involved the recruitment of women during the antenatal period, with
subsequent follow - up of mothers who delivered healthy, term singleton
infants, at 6 weeks and 6 months postpartum.
We assumed that breastfeeding rates were correlated between pregnancies based on several sources of observational data18, 19 and used data from the
Infant Feeding Practices
Study II to model breastfeeding duration in a
subsequent pregnancy contingent on duration of breastfeeding for the prior birth.19
Results: Eleven
studies were identified, of which 8 demonstrated improvements in
infant sleep outcomes
subsequent to the implementation of an educational behavioral program.
A single, small, retrospective case - control
study examined the use of newborn transient evoked otoacoustic emission hearing screening tests as a tool for identifying
infants at subsequent risk of SIDS.343 Infants who subsequently died from SIDS did not fail their hearing tests but, compared with controls, showed a decreased signal - to - noise ratio score in the right ear only (at frequencies of 2000, 3000, and 40
infants at
subsequent risk of SIDS.343
Infants who subsequently died from SIDS did not fail their hearing tests but, compared with controls, showed a decreased signal - to - noise ratio score in the right ear only (at frequencies of 2000, 3000, and 40
Infants who subsequently died from SIDS did not fail their hearing tests but, compared with controls, showed a decreased signal - to - noise ratio score in the right ear only (at frequencies of 2000, 3000, and 4000 Hz).
This
study is aimed at assessing the survival of
infants born between 22 and 34 weeks» gestation, and their
subsequent outcomes.
In «Palivizumab Prophylaxis in Preterm
Infants and Subsequent Recurrent Wheezing: 6 Year Follow - up Study,» researchers report on multicenter case - control study of 444 Japanese infants born at 33 - 35 weeks ges
Infants and
Subsequent Recurrent Wheezing: 6 Year Follow - up
Study,» researchers report on multicenter case - control study of 444 Japanese infants born at 33 - 35 weeks gesta
Study,» researchers report on multicenter case - control
study of 444 Japanese infants born at 33 - 35 weeks gesta
study of 444 Japanese
infants born at 33 - 35 weeks ges
infants born at 33 - 35 weeks gestation.
«This
study finds that not only are antibodies not effective at preventing transmission they may adversely influence both frequency of breast milk transmission and
subsequent infant morbidity.
Two
studies have examined
infant media use and
subsequent attention problems in school - aged children.45, 46 One of these
studies found that the effects of television watching on
infants» attention span varied with the content of the programming.
Studies with
infants also show that treating with corticosteroids during and after a phase of bronchiolitis may reduce the incidence of asthma and
subsequent bronchial wheezing (16).
One evaluation conducted in Queensland, Australia, reported moderate reductions in depressive symptoms for mothers in the intervention group at the six - week follow - up.89 A
subsequent follow - up, however, suggested that these benefits were not long lasting, as the depression effects had diminished by one year.90 Similarly, Healthy Families San Diego identified reductions in depression symptoms among program mothers during the first two years, but these effects, too, had diminished by year three.91 In Healthy Families New York, mothers at one site (that was supervised by a clinical psychologist) had lower rates of depression at one year (23 percent treatment vs. 38 percent controls).92 The
Infant Health and Development program also demonstrated decreases in depressive symptoms after one year of home visiting, as well as at the conclusion of the program at three years.93 Among Early Head Start families, maternal depressive symptoms remained stable for the program group during the
study and immediately after it ended, but decreased just before their children entered kindergarten.94 No program effects were found for maternal depression in the Nurse - Family Partnership, Hawaii Healthy Start, Healthy Families Alaska, or Early Start programs.
Subsequent studies also indicate that whether the father's attachment with the
infant is secure largely is dependent upon whether the mother -
infant attachment is secure.
Bowlby
studied infant - mother (or mother - substitute) attachments, and nothing in any
subsequent research indicates that
infants require more than one primary attachment, or that, if there are, collectively, important additional but lesser attachments, they even must be a «parent.»
In one seminal (no pun intended)
study, raters were more likely to correctly match pictures of
infants with biological fathers than biological mothers (i.e., babies looked more like dad than mom); 4 however, this finding has not been replicated by
subsequent research.5, 6 Interestingly, dads who think their kids look like them tend to have more positive relationships with those children.7 It makes sense that mothers (and mothers» relatives) are more likely to say that a baby looks like the father, possibly as a form of reassuring the father of his paternity.8 Although, to be fair, there is just something about a bald chubby baby that looks more «dad - like» than «mom - like.»
Several
studies have supported the power of the AAI to predict parenting and
subsequent infant — parent attachment (Fonagy et al., 1991; van IJzendoorn, 1995; Bakermans - Kranenburg and van IJzendoorn, 2009; Berthelot et al., 2015).