In the study published September 10 in the journal Pediatrics,
researchers found that children whose mothers had
depressive symptoms
during the first nine months after birth are more likely to be shorter
that their peers.
The researchers studied data on 6,500 kids who were
participating in the U.S. Early Childhood Longitudinal Study Birth
Cohort from 2001 to 2007, and analysed the heights of children at three
different periods: nine months, at age four and again when they were
five or six, approximately kindergarten age.
Other researches had found that a mother’s postpartum
depressive symptoms can influence growth during the first two years of a
child’s life, but the new study finds that the effects may persist in
even older children.
The study found that at the age of four, children
with mothers who had reported mild or moderate depression when they were
infants were 40 per cent more likely to be in the 10th percentile of
height or shorter, compared with other kids their age whose mothers did
not report early depression symptoms. By age five, kids of depressed
mums were 48 per cent more likely to be at or below the 10th percentile
of height.
However, the study does not prove that mum’s
depression causes a child’s short stature, but that the two are
associated. The authors could also not confirm the underlying mechanism
linking the two factors. But they have some theories: maternal
depression can lead to increased stress in children, for example, and
chronically high levels of the stress hormone cortisol have been
associated with lower levels of growth hormones in kids. Depressed
mothers may also have poor feeding practices like spending less time
breast feeding which may in turn affect growth.
Lead researcher and assistant professor at Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Pamela Surkan, says
depression might also get in the way of nurturing.
“We think that mothers who are depressed or blue
might have a hard time following through with caregiving tasks,” she
says. “We know that children of depressed mothers often suffer from poor
attachment and the depression seems to have effects on other
developmental outcomes. It makes sense that mothers who have depressive
symptoms might have reduced ability to take care of infants that they
might not always pick up cues from their kids.”
Another study published in April issue of Child Development
also found that depressed mothers are more likely to wake up their
babies at night than those who are not depressed – unlike the norm that
babies should not be disturbed while they sleep.
Pennsylvania State researchers found that mothers
with high depressive symptom levels are more likely to excessively worry
about their infants at night than mothers with low symptom levels, and
such mothers were more likely to seek out their babies at night and
spend more time with their infants than mothers with low symptom levels.
Associate director of the Social Science Research
Institute and professor of human development, psychology and pediatrics,
Douglas Teti, says one interesting thing about the finding is that when
depressed mothers sought out their infants at night, their infants did
not appear to be in need of parental help. They were either sound asleep
or perhaps awake, but not distressed.”
Depression in mothers does only affect infants and
toddlers but in most cases have a long-term effect. In a 2010 report,
researchers found that a mother’s depression in pregnancy is tied to
antisocial behaviour in teenagers.
The study, also published in Child Development,
found that children from urban areas whose mothers suffer from
depression during pregnancy are more likely than others to show
antisocial behaviour, including violent behaviour, later in life. It
also found that women who are aggressive and disruptive in their own
teenage years are more likely to become depressed in pregnancy, so that
the mothers’ history predicts their own children’s antisocial behaviour.
The study conducted by researchers at Cardiff
University, King’s College London, and the University of Bristol
considered the role of mothers’ depression during pregnancy by looking
at 120 British youth from inner-city areas.
Professor of psychology, Cardiff University in Wales,
Dale Hay, who was involved in the research, says much attention has
been given to the effects of postnatal depression on young infants but
depression during pregnancy may also affect the unborn child.
The teens’ mothers were interviewed while they were
pregnant, after they gave birth, and when their children were four, 11,
and 16 years old. According to the study, mothers who became depressed
when pregnant were four times as likely to have children who were
violent at 16. The result was true for both boys and girls.
The mothers’ depression in turn, was predicted by their own aggressive and disruptive behaviour as teenagers.
Hay says, “Although it’s not yet clear exactly how
depression in pregnancy might set infants on a pathway toward increased
antisocial behavior, our findings suggest that women with a history of
conduct problems who become depressed in pregnancy may be in special
need of support.”
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