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Maternal reflective functioning among mothers with childhood maltreatment histories: links to sensitive parenting and infant attachment security
Authors:Ann M. Stacks  Kristyn Wong  Marjorie Beeghly  Alissa Huth-Bocks  Jessica L. Irwin
Affiliation:1. Merrill-Palmer Skillman Institute, Wayne State University, Detroit, USA;2. Department of Psychology, Wayne State University, Detroit, USA;3. Department of Psychology, Wayne State University, Detroit, USA;4. Division of Developmental Medicine, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, USA;5. Department of Psychology, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, USA
Abstract:
This study examined relationships among maternal reflective functioning, parenting, infant attachment, and demographic risk in a relatively large (N = 83) socioeconomically diverse sample of women with and without a history of childhood maltreatment and their infants. Most prior research on parental reflective functioning has utilized small homogenous samples. Reflective functioning was assessed with the Parent Development Interview, parenting was coded from videotaped mother–child interactions, and infant attachment was evaluated in Ainsworth’s Strange Situation by independent teams of reliable coders masked to maternal history. Reflective functioning was associated with parenting sensitivity and secure attachment, and inversely associated with demographic risk and parenting negativity; however, it was not associated with maternal maltreatment history or PTSD. Parenting sensitivity mediated the relationship between reflective functioning and infant attachment, controlling for demographic risk. Findings are discussed in the context of prior research on reflective functioning and the importance of targeting reflective functioning in interventions.
Keywords:reflective functioning  parenting sensitivity  infant attachment security  maternal history of childhood maltreatment  demographic risk
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