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Title

Predictors of parental attachment during early parenthood.

Authors

Mercer RT; Ferketich SL

Abstract

Parental attachment of 121 high-risk women, 61 partners of high-risk women, 182 low-risk women, and 117 partners of low-risk women, was studied at the first week postpartum and 8 months following birth. The tests of theoretical models showed low predictive ability explaining from zero to 21% of the variance in parental attachment in the four groups over the two test periods. Empirical respecified models predicting parent-infant attachment at the first week postpartum and 8 months explained 31% and 29% of the variance among high-risk women, 69% and 45% among high-risk partners, 41% and 53% among low-risk women, and 35% and 38% among low-risk partners. Parental competence was a major predictor of parental attachment over all test periods for all four groups. Early parent-infant contact following birth was never a predictor except at 8 months when, among low-risk women, the opposite effect than that expected was observed; the later women held their infants the higher was their attachment. High-risk women scored significantly higher than low-risk women during the first week postpartum only.

Subjects

ATTACHMENT behavior; PARENT-child relationships

Publication

Journal of Advanced Nursing (Wiley-Blackwell), 1990, Vol 15, Issue 3, p268

ISSN

0309-2402

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1111/j.1365-2648.1990.tb01813.x

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