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The Effect of Parenting Stress on Child Behavior Problems in High-Risk Children with Prenatal Drug Exposure
Authors:Daniel M. Bagner  Stephen J. Sheinkopf  Cynthia Miller-Loncar  Linda L. LaGasse  Barry M. Lester  Jing Liu  Charles R. Bauer  Seetha Shankaran  Henrietta Bada  Abhik Das
Affiliation:(1) Brown Center for the Study of Children at Risk, Women and Infants’ Hospital, The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, 101 Dudley Street, Providence, RI 02905, USA;(2) University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA;(3) Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI, USA;(4) University of Kentucky Hospital, Lexington, KY, USA;(5) Research Triangle Institute, Rockville, MD, USA
Abstract:Objective To examine the relationship between early parenting stress and later child behavior in a high-risk sample and measure the effect of drug exposure on the relationship between parenting stress and child behavior. Methods A subset of child-caregiver dyads (= 607) were selected from the Maternal Lifestyle Study (MLS), which is a large sample of children (= 1,388) with prenatal cocaine exposure and a comparison sample unexposed to cocaine. Of the 607 dyads, 221 were prenatally exposed to cocaine and 386 were unexposed to cocaine. Selection was based on the presence of a stable caregiver at 4 and 36 months with no evidence of change in caregiver between those time points. Results Parenting stress at 4 months significantly predicted child externalizing behavior at 36 months. These relations were unaffected by cocaine exposure suggesting the relationship between parenting stress and behavioral outcome exists for high-risk children regardless of drug exposure history. Conclusions These results extend the findings of the relationship between parenting stress and child behavior to a sample of high-risk children with prenatal drug exposure. Implications for outcome and treatment are discussed. Portions of the data were previously presented at the 11th Annual Research Symposium on Mental Health Sciences, The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI and at the 25th Annual Society for Developmental and Behavior Pediatrics Meeting in Providence, RI.
Keywords:Disruptive behavior  Parenting stress  High-risk children  Prenatal drug exposure  Cocaine
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