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Maternal life events during pregnancy and offspring language ability in middle childhood: The Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort Study
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Maternal life events during pregnancy and offspring language ability in middle childhood: The Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort Study

Andrew J. O. Whitehouse, Monique Robinson, Stephen R. Zubrick, Q. W. Ang, Fiona J. Stanley and Craig E. Pennell
Early human development, Vol.86(8), pp.487-492
2010
PMID: 20621426

Abstract

Life Sciences & Biomedicine Obstetrics & Gynecology Pediatrics Science & Technology
Background: There is accumulating evidence for a link between maternal stress during pregnancy and later behavioural and emotional problems in children. Little research has examined other developmental outcomes. Aim: To determine the effect of maternal stress during pregnancy on offspring language ability in middle childhood. Study design: Longitudinal pregnancy cohort-study. Subjects: A total of 2900 mothers were recruited prior to the 18th week of pregnancy, delivering 2868 live births. The language ability of just under half of the offspring cohort (n = 1309; 45.6% of original sample) was assessed in middle childhood (Mean age = 10;7, Standard deviation = 0;2, range: 9;5-11;11). Outcome measures: Language ability was measured using the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-Revised (PPVT-R). The main predictor variable was the frequency of 10 typically 'stressful' life events experienced by mothers during early and/or late pregnancy. Children were allocated to four groups according to whether they were exposed to high maternal stress (>= 2 life events) during early pregnancy only, late pregnancy only, both, or neither. Results: Mixed-effects regression analyses revealed no association between the maternal experience of two or more stressful life events at any time-point during pregnancy and PPVT-R scores. Repeating the regression analyses with more lenient (>= 1 life events) or strict (>= 3 life events) thresholds for defining high-levels of maternal stress did not alter the pattern of findings. Conclusions: Maternal experience of typically stressful life events during pregnancy has a negligible effect on vocabulary development to middle childhood. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.72 Obstetrics & Gynecology
1.72.1072 Perinatal Mental Health
Web Of Science research areas
Obstetrics & Gynecology
Pediatrics
ESI research areas
Clinical Medicine
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