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Very Preterm Babies May Have Trouble Bonding With Parents
Study authors say parenting problems are not the cause
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
U.K. researchers looked at 71 very preterm infants -- born at less than 32 weeks' gestation or weighing less than 3 pounds 5 ounces -- and 105 full-term babies. They found that 61 percent of the very preterm infants were securely bonded to their mothers, compared with 72 percent of the full-term babies.
The study also found that 32 percent of very preterm infants showed "disorganized attachment" at 18 months, compared with 17 percent of the full-term children, according to the University of Warwick team.
In healthy attachment, a child uses the parent as a secure base from which to explore the world. In disorganized attachment, a child shows conflicting behavior in their relationship with their parents, the researchers explained.
These differences in attachment occurred even though mothers of very preterm children were as -- or even more -- sensitive in their parenting than mothers of full-term infants. This suggests that disorganized attachment in very preterm babies was caused by brain abnormalities, not harmful parenting.
The researchers noted that disorganized attachment can be an sign of negative parenting and abuse in full-term infants, and that this study highlights the need for health care workers to know whether a child was born prematurely when assessing baby-parent relationships.
"Very preterm children often spend months in incubators and in hospital after birth. Despite this stressful start we found parents of very preterm children to be as sensitive in their parenting as those of healthy preterm children," study leader Dieter Wolke said in a university news release.
"However," he added "very preterm children more often have neurological and developmental problems and these explained why they were more likely to be disorganized in their attachment or bonding despite sensitive parenting."
The study was published online recently in the journal Archives of Disease in Childhood: Fetal and Neonatal Edition.
While the study suggested that very preterm babies may be at risk for bonding trouble. It did not prove a cause-and-effect relationship.
"Health professionals should be aware that disorganized attachment in preterm children is often a sign of these children's developmental problems and not because they are harshly or abusively parented," Wolke said in the news release.
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