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It has been argued that behavior problems in toddlers are signals of disturbances in the relationship with the primary caregiver, rather than markers of psychopathology in the toddler [ 54].
Employing data from the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study (MoBa), longitudinal associations between maternal pre-pregnancy risk drinking and behavior problems in toddlers aged 18 and 36 months were examined.
Research that has examined the effect of parental heavy alcohol use on behavior problems in toddlers is in general limited, and the role of heavy alcohol use toddler mothers has, to the best of our knowledge, not been studied independently of paternal heavy alcohol use.
The aims of the present study were thus to (1) investigate whether maternal pre-pregnancy risk drinking predicted behavior problems in toddlers, and (2) whether a potential association could be explained by other risk factors associated with maternal risk drinking, including prenatal alcohol exposure, current maternal alcohol consumption, and maternal psychopathology.
One of the best ways to prevent behavior problems in toddlers is to give them choices.
Similar(55)
The associations between maternal pre-pregnancy drinking problems and internalizing and externalizing behavior problems in their toddlers aged 18 and 36 months were analyzed using logistic regression models.
The independent role of maternal heavy alcohol use on behavior problems in the toddler years is thus largely unknown, and is therefore the focus of the present study.
In the present study, we found higher levels of externalizing and internalizing behavior problems in the population among toddlers of mothers who engaged in heavy alcohol use.
Increased levels of behavior problems among toddlers of mothers engaging in heavy alcohol use are probably not caused by the heavy alcohol use behavior per se, but should rather be attributed to a range of challenges and problematic characteristics associated with these mothers, toddlers and families.
We're very aware of the debate and we're watching it intently". A month later, a study from the Harvard School of Public Health, published in the journal Pediatrics, linked exposure to BPA during pregnancy to hyperactive, depressive, and anxious behavior in young girls, finding that the higher the mothers' BPA levels, the more likely the girls were to exhibit behavior problems as toddlers.
Increased levels of behavior problems among toddlers of heavy drinking mothers should therefore be attributed to other adverse characteristics associated with these mothers, toddlers and families.
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