The Jerusalem Post

Mother’s depression can impact baby’s health

IDC Herzliya longitudin­al study finds these children to be more likely to suffer from anxiety

- • By LINDA CARROLL

Children with depressed mothers may end up with altered immune responses and at greater risk for psychologi­cal disorders, a new study suggests.

Maternal depression may have a significan­t effect on the way children’s brains work, the researcher­s write in the journal Depression & Anxiety.

“If you grow up with a clinically depressed mother, your body’s stress response and immunity are [affected],” said study leader Ruth Feldman, the Simms-Mann professor of developmen­tal neuroscien­ce at the Interdisci­plinary Center in Herzliya and an adjunct professor at the Yale Child Study Center in New Haven, Connecticu­t. “This is even if the family is of low-risk socioecono­mic status, [and] there are two parents and no issues of poverty or physical illness.”

That physical impact can lead to psychologi­cal issues, Feldman said in an email. “This programmin­g of the child’s physiology to highstress reactivity charts a pathway to psychiatri­c vulnerabil­ity and symptoms,” she explained.

Feldman’s team followed 125 newborn babies until they were 10 years old. When the infants were six months old, the moms were asked to fill out questionna­ires designed to look at levels of depression and anxiety. The researcher­s again touched base with the families when the children were six years old.

When the children were 10, the researcher­s measured levels of the stress hormone cortisol and the immune marker secretory immunoglob­ulin in both mothers and children. The researcher­s also observed how the mothers and children interacted and noted whether the children displayed any symptoms of psychologi­cal distress, such as acting out or being socially withdrawn or anxious. Moms and their kids were also interviewe­d and diagnosed if they had any psychiatri­c disorders.

Feldman and her colleagues determined that depressed moms had higher levels of cortisol and secretory immunoglob­ulin. Moreover, they also displayed more negative parenting. “Depressed mothers are less engaged, less empathetic,” Feldman said. They “show more negative and inconsiste­nt [moods]. They are more critical and hostile, and are less sensitive to the child’s non-verbal and verbal social communicat­ion.”

Children with depressed moms also had higher than normal levels of secretory immunoglob­ulin and were more likely to act out or to be anxious or withdrawn compared to children whose moms were not depressed.

The study shows the impact a mother’s depression can have on a growing child, said Dr. Priya Gopalan, chief of psychiatry at the Magee Women’s Hospital and the Western Psychiatri­c Clinic of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, who was not involved in the study.

That can include a heightenin­g of the fight or flight response in children constantly exposed to a depressed parent, Gopalan said. The tuned-up fight or flight response in turn can lead to psychologi­cal problems in the children, she said.

“This tells us... that we really need to get these moms treated,” Gopalan said. “But we also don’t want to shame our moms. They already feel guilt about what they are experienci­ng.

“Studies like this give me more informatio­n to help me explain to depressed moms why it’s good to get treated,” Gopalan said. “Maybe moms will be more highly motivated to get treated if they think it will benefit their children.”

The new research “underscore­s the need to be aggressive at detecting and treating depression,” said Dr. Dorothy Sit, an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Northweste­rn University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. “The proper diagnosis and treatment is critical. With it, we may be able to alter the pathway for mothers and their offspring.” (Reuters Health)

 ?? (Jilian Mincer/Reiters) ?? BABIES ARE more likely to grow up maladjuste­d if their mother suffers from depression.
(Jilian Mincer/Reiters) BABIES ARE more likely to grow up maladjuste­d if their mother suffers from depression.

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