Affleck G, Tennen H, Rowe J
University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington.
Am J Ment Retard. 1988 Jan;92(4):360-8.
Sixty-seven mothers were interviewed at the time of their child's discharge from a newborn intensive care unit and 6 months after hospital discharge. After 6 months, mothers who had done more to prevent adverse pregnancy outcomes, had been more optimistic about the outcomes of their pregnancy, and saw their infant's complications as more avoidable reported greater concurrent mood disturbance and/or more distress ensuing from their child's hospitalization. Mothers' risk and prevention appraisals also played a role in their attitudes toward future childbearing, independent of mothers' reproductive history, the severity of the infants' medical condition, and the infant's behavioral difficulty at 6 months. The single most important predictor of mothers' expectations of future pregnancies, however, was whether the child was first born.