Prenatal stress for infants can be made up for by good mothering

Prenatal stress for infants can be made up for by good motheringAccording to a new study in the US, good mothering in the infant's early months may make up for the risks the baby faced in the womb.

Foetuses exposed to high levels of stress hormone -- linked with babies' poor cognitive development -- can escape this fate if their mothers provide them sensitive care during infancy and toddler-hood, research has shown.

The first, direct human evidence that foetuses exposed to elevated levels of the stress hormone cortisol may have trouble paying attention or solving problems later on is represented by the new study.

Study author Thomas O'Connor, professor of psychiatry and of psychology at the University of Rochester Medical Centre (URMC), New York have said," Our results shape the argument that foetal exposure to cortisol - which may in part be controlled by the mother's stress level - and early caregiving experience combine to influence a child's neurodevelopment."

O'Connor further said," If future studies confirm these findings, we'll need to not only engineer ways to reduce stress in pregnancy, but we'll need to also promote sensitive caregiving by moms and dads."

An URMC release said that for the study, researchers recruited 125 women in an urban maternity hospital, taking a sample of their amniotic fluid so that stress hormones in it could be measured. (With Input from Agencies)

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