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  1. Article ; Online: Longitudinal patterns of adversity from childhood to adolescence: Examining associations with mental health through emerging adulthood using a random-intercept latent transition analysis.

    Raghunathan, Radhika S / Johnson, Sara B / Voegtline, Kristin M / Sosnowski, David W / Kuehn, Molly / Ialongo, Nicholas S / Musci, Rashelle J

    Developmental psychology

    2024  

    Abstract: Childhood adversity can have detrimental impacts on life course mental and physical health. Timing, nature, severity, and chronicity of adversity are thought to explain much of the variability in health and developmental outcomes among exposed ... ...

    Abstract Childhood adversity can have detrimental impacts on life course mental and physical health. Timing, nature, severity, and chronicity of adversity are thought to explain much of the variability in health and developmental outcomes among exposed individuals. The current study seeks to characterize heterogeneity in adverse experiences over time at the individual, family, and neighborhood domains in a cohort of predominantly Black children (85% Black and 15% White, 46.2% girls, 67.2% free/reduced lunch in first grade), and to examine associations with mental health from sixth grade to age 26. Participants were part of a randomized universal preventive interventions trial in first grade with prospective follow-up through early adulthood. Separate models characterized heterogeneity in adversity in elementary, middle, and high schools. Changes in adversity over time and relationships with mental health (anxiety, depression, suicidal behaviors) were investigated using a random-intercept latent transition analysis (RI-LTA). We identified three-class solutions in early childhood, middle school, and high school. Generally, both a higher and a lower poly-adversity class were observed at each time point, with varying nature of adversity characterized by the third class. RI-LTA indicated prevalent within-individual changes in adverse exposure over time and differential associations with mental health and suicidal behaviors. Results suggest that treating adverse exposures as a static construct may limit the ability to characterize salient variation over time. Identifying complexity in adverse experiences and their relation to health and well-being is key for developing and implementing effective prevention and early intervention efforts to mitigate negative effects through the life course. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-02-29
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2066223-3
    ISSN 1939-0599 ; 0012-1649
    ISSN (online) 1939-0599
    ISSN 0012-1649
    DOI 10.1037/dev0001717
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Developmental Milestone Attainment in US Children Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

    Johnson, Sara B / Kuehn, Molly / Lambert, Jennifer O / Spin, J Paul / Klein, Lauren M / Howard, Barbara / Sturner, Raymond / Perrin, Eliana M

    JAMA pediatrics

    2024  

    Abstract: Importance: Restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the lives of young children, but the association between the pandemic and any changes in early childhood developmental milestone achievement in the US remains unclear.: Objectives: ... ...

    Abstract Importance: Restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the lives of young children, but the association between the pandemic and any changes in early childhood developmental milestone achievement in the US remains unclear.
    Objectives: To determine the association between the COVID-19 pandemic and changes in developmental screening scores among US children aged 0 to 5 years and to investigate whether caregivers self-reported more worries about their children or concerns about children's behavior during the pandemic, regardless of milestone achievement.
    Design, setting, and participants: This was a cohort study using an interrupted time series analysis comparing prepandemic (March 1, 2018, to February 29, 2020), interruption (March 1 to May 31, 2020), and intrapandemic (June 1, 2020, to May 30, 2022) periods among 50 205 children (randomly sampled from a population of 502 052 children) aged 0 to 5 years whose parents or caregivers completed developmental screening at pediatric visits at US pediatric primary care practices participating in a web-based clinical process support system.
    Exposure: COVID-19 pandemic period.
    Main outcomes and measures: Age-standardized Ages and Stages Questionnaire, Third Edition (ASQ) domain scores (communication, personal-social, problem-solving, gross motor, fine motor), and rate of caregivers' concerns about the child's behavior or worries about the child as measured on the ASQ.
    Results: A total of 50 205 children (25 852 [51.5%] male; mean [SD] age, 18.6 [16.0] months) and 134 342 ASQ observations were included. In adjusted models, significant age-specific mean score decreases from prepandemic to intrapandemic were observed in communication (-0.029; 95% CI, -0.041 to -0.017), problem-solving (-0.018; 95% CI, -0.030 to -0.006), and personal-social (-0.016; 95% CI, -0.028 to -0.004) domains. There were no changes in fine or gross motor domains prepandemic to intrapandemic. For infants aged 0 to 12 months, similar effect sizes were observed but only for communication (-0.027; 95% CI, -0.044 to -0.011) and problem-solving (-0.018; 95% CI, -0.035 to -0.001). After accounting for age-standardized ASQ scores, caregiver worries about the child increased slightly in the intrapandemic period compared with the prepandemic period (rate ratio, 1.088; 95% CI, 1.036-1.143), but there were no changes in caregiver concerns about the child's behavior. While changes in developmental screening scores were modest (2%-3%), nationwide, this could translate to more than 1500 additional recommended developmental referrals over baseline each month.
    Conclusions and relevance: Modest changes in developmental screening scores are reassuring in the short term but may tax an already overburdened developmental behavioral pediatrics infrastructure. Continued attention to developmental surveillance is critical since the long-term population- and individual-level implications of these changes are unclear.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-04-22
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2701223-2
    ISSN 2168-6211 ; 2168-6203
    ISSN (online) 2168-6211
    ISSN 2168-6203
    DOI 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2024.0683
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: The Association Between Maternal Reminiscing and Maternal Perpetration of Neglect.

    Kuehn, Molly / Lawson, Monica / Speidel, Ruth / Valentino, Kristin

    Child maltreatment

    2020  Volume 25, Issue 4, Page(s) 468–477

    Abstract: The elaborative and sensitive guidance of maternal reminiscing are robust facilitators of children's cognitive and socioemotional development. Maternal reminiscing has been identified as impaired among maltreating mothers and as a mechanism linking ... ...

    Abstract The elaborative and sensitive guidance of maternal reminiscing are robust facilitators of children's cognitive and socioemotional development. Maternal reminiscing has been identified as impaired among maltreating mothers and as a mechanism linking maltreatment with poor developmental outcomes. Few studies, however, have examined associations between maternal reminiscing and the severity of abuse, neglect, and emotional maltreatment perpetrated by mothers. In the current study, 156 maltreated and 80 nonmaltreated preschoolers (3-6-year-olds) and their mothers reminisced about four emotional events. Maternal reminiscing was coded for elaboration and sensitive guidance. Department of Child Service records were coded for the severity of each maltreatment subtype perpetrated by the mother against the child that reminisced in the study (i.e., target child level) and against any children within the family (i.e., family level). Neglect severity at both target and family levels was negatively associated with maternal sensitive guidance during reminiscing. More severe neglect perpetrated at the family level was associated with lower maternal elaboration. Maternal reminiscing was not significantly associated with abuse severity or emotional maltreatment severity at the target and family levels. These results contribute to a nuanced understanding of maternal reminiscing among maltreating families, with implications for maltreated children's development and relational interventions.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-04-23
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
    ZDB-ID 1332193-6
    ISSN 1552-6119 ; 1077-5595
    ISSN (online) 1552-6119
    ISSN 1077-5595
    DOI 10.1177/1077559520916241
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article ; Online: Increasing Maternal Anxiety in the Pre- to Postpartum Transition Predicts Infant Feeding Practices and Beliefs.

    Fan, Juliana G / Kuehn, Molly / Voegtline, Kristin M / Raghunathan, Radhika S / Hernandez, Raquel G / Johnson, Sara B

    Academic pediatrics

    2023  

    Abstract: Objective: Anxiety symptoms increase for some mothers in the perinatal period. Little is known about how increasing anxiety relates to infant feeding beliefs or weight-for-length. We examined relationships between clinically meaningful increases in ... ...

    Abstract Objective: Anxiety symptoms increase for some mothers in the perinatal period. Little is known about how increasing anxiety relates to infant feeding beliefs or weight-for-length. We examined relationships between clinically meaningful increases in maternal anxiety symptoms and perceptions of infant feeding behaviors and weight-for-length.
    Methods: Participants were 237 mothers with singleton pregnancies enrolled from obstetric care between 2015 and 2020 who completed the Infant Feeding Questionnaire (IFQ) at 6 months. Anxiety symptoms were measured during pregnancy (M = 24.6 weeks, SD = 6.3) and 6 weeks postpartum using the PROMIS-6A. Linear regression was used to test associations of prenatal, postpartum, or clinically meaningful increases in anxiety symptoms (ie, 3T-score increase) with two outcomes: IFQ (seven factors) and infant weight-for-length at age 6 months.
    Results: Prenatal symptoms were unrelated to IFQ factors. Postpartum symptoms predicted IFQ factors related to worry, such as concern for infant undereating/becoming underweight (B = 0.012, P = .02). Increasing symptoms predicted worry-related concerns as well as concern for infant hunger (B = 0.60, P ≤ .01) and greater preference for feeding on a schedule (B = 0.65, P ≤ .01). In a model including both increasing symptoms and postpartum symptoms, increasing anxiety symptoms drove associations with IFQ factors (eg, preference for feeding on a schedule, (B = 0.81, P = .01). Anxiety was unrelated to infant weight-for-length at 6 months.
    Conclusions: Clinically meaningful increases in anxiety symptoms were associated with feeding beliefs related to worry. Increasing anxiety was a better predictor of feeding beliefs than the presence of pre- or postpartum symptoms alone. Mothers with increasing anxiety may benefit from support establishing health-promoting infant feeding practices.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-11-30
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2483385-X
    ISSN 1876-2867 ; 1876-2859
    ISSN (online) 1876-2867
    ISSN 1876-2859
    DOI 10.1016/j.acap.2023.11.020
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article ; Online: What Do Child Abuse and Neglect Medical Evaluation Consultation Notes Tell Researchers and Clinicians?

    Golonka, Megan / Liu, Yuerong / Rohrs, Rosie / Copeland, Jennifer / Byrd, Jessalyn / Stilwell, Laura / Crew, Carter / Kuehn, Molly / Snyder-Fickler, Elizabeth / Hurst, Jillian H / Evans, Kelly E / Terrell, Lindsay / Gifford, Elizabeth J

    Child maltreatment

    2022  Volume 29, Issue 1, Page(s) 117–128

    Abstract: Child abuse and neglect (CAN) medical experts provide specialized multidisciplinary care to children when there is concern for maltreatment. Their clinical notes contain valuable information on child- and family-level factors, clinical concerns, and ... ...

    Abstract Child abuse and neglect (CAN) medical experts provide specialized multidisciplinary care to children when there is concern for maltreatment. Their clinical notes contain valuable information on child- and family-level factors, clinical concerns, and service placements that may inform the needed supports for the family. We created and implemented a coding system for data abstraction from these notes. Participants were 1,397 children ages 0-17 years referred for a consultation with a CAN medical provider at an urban teaching and research hospital between March 2013 and December 2017. Coding themes were developed using an interdisciplinary team-based approach to qualitative analysis, and descriptive results are presented using a developmental-contextual framework. This study demonstrates the potential value of developing a coding system to assess characteristics and patterns from CAN medical provider notes, which could be helpful in improving quality of care and prevention and detection of child abuse.
    MeSH term(s) Child ; Humans ; Child Abuse/diagnosis ; Child Abuse/prevention & control ; Referral and Consultation
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-10-20
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 1332193-6
    ISSN 1552-6119 ; 1077-5595
    ISSN (online) 1552-6119
    ISSN 1077-5595
    DOI 10.1177/10775595221134537
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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