Maternal Cocaine Use: Estimated Effects on Mother-Child Play Interactions in the Preschool Period

Arnise L. Johnson(Johns Hopkins University), Connie E. Morrow(Johns Hopkins University), Veronica H. Accornero(Johns Hopkins University), Lihua Xue(Johns Hopkins University), James C. Anthony(Johns Hopkins University), Emmalee S. Bandstra(Johns Hopkins University)
Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics
August 1, 2002
Cited by 89Open Access

Abstract

The study objective was to evaluate the quality of parent-child interactions in preschool-aged children exposed prenatally to cocaine. African-American mothers and their full-term newborns (n = 343) were enrolled prospectively at birth and classified as either prenatally cocaine-exposed (n = 157) or non-cocaine-exposed (n = 186) on the basis of maternal self-report and bioassays. Follow-up evaluations at 3 years of age (mean age, 40 mo) included a videotaped dyadic play session and maternal interviews to assess ongoing drug use and maternal psychological distress. Play interactions were coded using a modified version of Egeland et al's Teaching Task coding scheme. Regression analyses indicated cocaine-associated deficits in mother-child interaction, even with statistical adjustment for multiple suspected influences on interaction dynamics. Mother-child interactions were most impaired in cocaine-exposed dyads when the mother continued to report cocaine use at the 3-year follow-up. Multivariate profile analysis of the Egeland interaction subscales indicated greater maternal intrusiveness and hostility, poorer quality of instruction, lower maternal confidence, and diminished child persistence in the cocaine-exposed dyads.


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