Ingeborgrud Christine Baalsrud, Oerbeck Beate, Friis Svein, Pripp Are Hugo, Aase Heidi, Biele Guido, Dalsgaard Søren, Overgaard Kristin Romvig
Institute of Clinical Medicine, Division of Mental Health and Addiction, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Unit, University of Oslo, P.O. Box 1039, Blindern, Oslo, 0315, Norway.
Division of Mental Health and Addiction, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2025 Apr;60(4):895-903. doi: 10.1007/s00127-024-02792-1. Epub 2024 Nov 6.
Low perceived social support is associated with adverse effects on maternal mental health, and often coexists with other risk factors for offspring anxiety and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). We aimed to investigate whether low maternal social support during pregnancy and early childhood predicted anxiety and ADHD symptoms in children at ages 3.5 and 8 years.
This study is part of the longitudinal, population-based Norwegian Mother, Father, and Child Cohort Study. Mothers were queried about perceived social support twice during pregnancy, and again at child ages 18 months and 3 years. They were interviewed about their children's symptoms of anxiety and ADHD at 3.5 years. At 8 years (n = 781), the Child Symptom Inventory-4 was used to identify children who fulfilled the criteria for anxiety disorders and ADHD. Logistic regression models estimated the risk of child anxiety and ADHD, depending on maternal social support.
Low maternal social support predicted child anxiety symptoms at both ages 3.5 and 8 years as well as ADHD symptoms at 8 years. When including other maternal stressors and child risk factors, low maternal social support remained a significant predictor for child anxiety symptoms at 3.5 years, and there was a trend towards also predicting child anxiety and ADHD symptoms at 8 years.
The associations between low maternal social support and child symptoms of anxiety and ADHD found in the present study, suggest that focusing on mothers with low social support may hold significance for child symptoms years later.
低感知社会支持与对孕产妇心理健康的不良影响相关,且常与后代焦虑和注意力缺陷/多动障碍(ADHD)的其他风险因素共存。我们旨在调查孕期和幼儿期母亲的低社会支持是否能预测3.5岁和8岁儿童的焦虑和ADHD症状。
本研究是基于挪威母亲、父亲和儿童队列的纵向人群研究的一部分。在孕期询问母亲两次关于感知社会支持的情况,在孩子18个月和3岁时再次询问。在孩子3.5岁时询问她们孩子的焦虑和ADHD症状。在8岁时(n = 781),使用儿童症状量表-4来识别符合焦虑症和ADHD标准的儿童。逻辑回归模型根据母亲的社会支持情况估计儿童焦虑和ADHD的风险。
母亲的低社会支持在3.5岁和8岁时都能预测儿童的焦虑症状,在8岁时还能预测ADHD症状。当纳入其他母亲应激源和儿童风险因素时,母亲的低社会支持在3.5岁时仍是儿童焦虑症状的显著预测因素,并且在8岁时也有预测儿童焦虑和ADHD症状的趋势。
本研究发现母亲的低社会支持与儿童焦虑和ADHD症状之间的关联,表明关注社会支持低的母亲可能对多年后的儿童症状具有重要意义。