Surkan Pamela J, Ryan Louise M, Carvalho Vieira Lina M, Berkman Lisa F, Peterson Karen E
Harvard School of Public Health Boston, MA, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2007 Jan;64(2):375-88. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2006.09.021. Epub 2006 Nov 3.
Prevalence of child undernutrition remains high in many developing countries. In settings with scarce resources, modifiable maternal social conditions may influence feeding and parenting practices, in turn affecting child growth. This study aims to quantify the association between maternal social support and depression to children's physical growth outcomes in Teresina, Piauí, northeast Brazil. Interviews were conducted with a random sample of 595 mothers of children 6-24 months old in four low-income sections of Teresina, Piauí. We collected data on sociodemographic factors, mothers' social support, mothers' depressive symptomatology, and child's weight and recumbent length. Weight-for-height z-scores (WHZ), height-for-age z-scores (HAZ) and weight-for-age z-scores (WAZ) were calculated using the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion Center SAS program based on the 2000 Centers for Disease Control reference growth curves. Multivariable linear regression was used to model the association between maternal social support and depression to child growth, adjusting for biological and socio-demographic variables. Interviewer and neighborhood variation was accounted for through the inclusion of random effects. In adjusted models, material support, measured by number of friends or family members available to mothers when needing food or milk, was related to 0.3 higher average WHZ and 0.2 higher average WAZ in their children. Maternal positive social interaction, which reflects engagement in leisure-time activities with others, was associated with 0.3 higher average WHZ. Mothers' affectionate support was related to 0.2 higher average children's WHZ and WAZ, whereas social support for resolving a conflict was associated with 0.2 lower average HAZ. Maternal depression was not associated with child growth. It is concluded that inadequate growth in children may be sensitive to maternal social support.
在许多发展中国家,儿童营养不良的患病率仍然很高。在资源匮乏的地区,可改变的母亲社会状况可能会影响喂养和育儿方式,进而影响儿童的生长发育。本研究旨在量化巴西东北部皮奥伊州特雷西纳市母亲的社会支持与抑郁与儿童身体生长发育结果之间的关联。对皮奥伊州特雷西纳市四个低收入社区中595名6至24个月大儿童的母亲进行了随机抽样访谈。我们收集了社会人口学因素、母亲的社会支持、母亲的抑郁症状以及儿童的体重和身长数据。使用美国国家慢性病预防与健康促进中心的SAS程序,根据2000年疾病控制中心的参考生长曲线,计算身高别体重Z评分(WHZ)、年龄别身高Z评分(HAZ)和年龄别体重Z评分(WAZ)。采用多变量线性回归模型来模拟母亲的社会支持与抑郁与儿童生长发育之间的关联,并对生物学和社会人口学变量进行了调整。通过纳入随机效应来考虑访谈者和社区差异。在调整后的模型中,以母亲在需要食物或牛奶时可获得的朋友或家庭成员数量衡量的物质支持,与子女平均WHZ高0.3、平均WAZ高0.2有关。母亲积极的社会互动反映了与他人参与休闲活动,与平均WHZ高0.3有关。母亲的情感支持与子女平均WHZ和WAZ高0.2有关,而解决冲突的社会支持与平均HAZ低0.2有关。母亲的抑郁与儿童生长发育无关。研究得出结论,儿童生长发育不足可能对母亲的社会支持敏感。