Work

Prenatal Maternal Stress and Child Hair Cortisol Four Years Later: Evidence from a Low-Income Sample

Public Deposited

Default work thumbnail

For more information on the published version, visit Science Direct's Website.

Background: Maternal stress during pregnancy can influence the trajectory of fetal development, shaping offspring physiology and health in enduring ways. Some research implicates fetal programming of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis as a mediator of these effects. The present study is the first to examine child hair cortisol concentration (HCC) and maternal stress during pregnancy in a diverse, low-income sample. Methods: The sample consisted of 77 healthy, low-income (M annual income: $13,321), mother-children pairs (M child age = 3.81 years, SD = 0.43). The children were 57 % girls, 43 % boys. Mothers were 65 % Latina/Hispanic, 28 % Non-Hispanic White, 7% Black/African American. Maternal prenatal stress was measured with the Perceived Stress Scale administered by interview in the second and third trimesters, and again approximately four years later when child hair samples for assaying HCC were collected. Results: On average maternal perceived stress increased significantly across pregnancy, then returned to lower levels 4 years after birth. Regression analysis revealed that child HCC was not significantly predicted by maternal perceived stress at either single prenatal time point. Exploratory analysis revealed evidence of a relation between increases in maternal prenatal stress from second to third trimester and child HCC four years later (r = .37, p =  .04). Conclusions: These results suggest that measures of prenatal maternal stress at any one time point may not be predictive of offspring long-term HPA output in low-income child samples, but that increases in stress levels across pregnancy may provide important information undetected by individual time point measures.

Alen, Nicholas V., Camelia E. Hostinar, Nicole E. Mahrer, Stephen R. Martin, Christine Guardino, Madeleine U. Shalowitz, Sharon L. Ramey, and Christine Dunkel Schetter. Prenatal Maternal Stress and Child Hair Cortisol Four Years Later: Evidence from a Low-Income Sample. Psycho­neuro­endocrinology 117 (2020): e104707. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0306453020301268#!


MLA citation style (9th ed.)

Schetter, Christine Dunkel, et al. Prenatal Maternal Stress and Child Hair Cortisol Four Years Later: Evidence From a Low-income Sample. . 2020. dickinson.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/45195d84-be27-442a-b6f4-bd0ed48d32bc.

APA citation style (7th ed.)

S. C. Dunkel, R. S. L, S. M. U, A. N. V, G. C. M, M. S. R, M. N. E, & H. C. E. (2020). Prenatal Maternal Stress and Child Hair Cortisol Four Years Later: Evidence from a Low-Income Sample. https://dickinson.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/45195d84-be27-442a-b6f4-bd0ed48d32bc

Chicago citation style (CMOS 17, author-date)

Schetter, Christine Dunkel, Ramey, Sharon L., Shalowitz, Madeleine U., Alen, Nicholas V., Guardino, Christine M., Martin, Stephen R., Mahrer, Nicole E. et al. Prenatal Maternal Stress and Child Hair Cortisol Four Years Later: Evidence From a Low-Income Sample. 2020. https://dickinson.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/45195d84-be27-442a-b6f4-bd0ed48d32bc.

Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.

Relations

In Collection: