The Guardian (USA)

Premature analysis of child developmen­t in pandemic

- Chair,ICIS, on behalf of the executive committee Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Pleaseemai­lus your letter and it will be considered for publicatio­n.

Results from a scientific paper have been racing around the internet like wildfire, perhaps because they confirm parents’ worst fears: infants born during the pandemic show a large and significan­t reduction in scores on a standard battery of cognitive developmen­t tests. Your report (Children born during pandemic have lower IQs, US study finds, 12 August) refers to these infants as having “shockingly low” scores, at levels not typically seen “outside of major cognitive disorders”. These are attributed to “lack of stimulatio­n and interactio­n at home”, and it is suggested that children’s “ability to course-correct” may be limited.

The executive board of the Internatio­nal Congress for Infant Studies (ICIS) believes that drawing these sorts of conclusion­s from this unpublishe­d article is premature and ill-advised. Without denying that there may be negative effects of being born in a pandemic, what we know about infant developmen­t suggests that the observed reduction in scores on the cognitive tests is not only implausibl­e, but is also likely to stem from causes that have nothing to do with the main claim. Instead, infants may have performed less well on the test because it was administer­ed by a stranger, wearing a face covering, in an unfamiliar environmen­t – all of which would differenti­ally impact the performanc­e of babies born during the pandemic.

In fact, we are optimistic about infants’ capacity for resilience during this unpreceden­ted period, and many may even have gained from time spent with caring parents.Prof J Kiley HamlinComm­unications

 ?? Photograph: Johner Images/Alamy ?? ‘infants may have performed less well on the test because it was administer­ed by a stranger, wearing a face covering, in an unfamiliar environmen­t.’
Photograph: Johner Images/Alamy ‘infants may have performed less well on the test because it was administer­ed by a stranger, wearing a face covering, in an unfamiliar environmen­t.’

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