Mothers’ touch change effects of prenatal stress

17 Oct 2012

1

Scientists at the Universities of Liverpool, Manchester, and King's College London, have found that mothers who stroke their baby's body in the first few weeks after birth may change the effects that stress during pregnancy can have on an infant's early-life development.

Researchers world-wide have been studying whether stress in pregnancy can lead to emotional and behavioural problems in children for many years.  Attention is now moving towards how parents might alter these effects after birth.  Researchers are aiming to improve understanding of the issues to help enhance information services for pregnant women and their partners.

Reverse effects of prenatal stress
Scientists believe that stress in pregnancy can have an effect on an infant in later life by reducing the activity of genes that play a role in stress response.  Studies of early care-giving in rats have found that high levels of mothers' licking and grooming their pups soon after birth can increase the activity of these genes and may reverse the effects of prenatal stress on their offspring.

''The eventual aim is to find out whether we should recommend that mothers who have been stressed during pregnancy should be encouraged to stroke their babies early in life''

Some studies suggest that impacts of prenatal stress on an infant's development can be either positive or negative depending on the type of environment a child encounters. It is thought that some children may experience the effects through being more prone to high levels of fear or anger.

The team at Liverpool, Manchester and London followed first-time mothers from pregnancy through to the first years of their children's lives as part of Medical Research Council (MRC) funded research, The Wirral Child Health and Development Study.

Latest articles

OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger joins OpenAI as personal-agent project moves to foundation

OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger joins OpenAI as personal-agent project moves to foundation

Fractal Analytics shares slip on debut as AI uncertainty weighs on sentiment

Fractal Analytics shares slip on debut as AI uncertainty weighs on sentiment

Warner Bros weighs reopening sale talks with Paramount amid competing bids

Warner Bros weighs reopening sale talks with Paramount amid competing bids

ByteDance pledges safeguards for Seedance AI after studios raise IP concerns

ByteDance pledges safeguards for Seedance AI after studios raise IP concerns

Musk ramps up SpaceX moon plans as Bezos accelerates Blue Origin in race against China

Musk ramps up SpaceX moon plans as Bezos accelerates Blue Origin in race against China

Indians can now travel to 56 destinations without prior visa as passport ranking improves

Indians can now travel to 56 destinations without prior visa as passport ranking improves

CEO says EU’s IRIS2 must match Starlink on price and performance

CEO says EU’s IRIS2 must match Starlink on price and performance

Applied Materials jumps 12% as AI chip demand drives strong revenue forecast

Applied Materials jumps 12% as AI chip demand drives strong revenue forecast

Opening the silos: India approves 3 million tonnes of wheat and product exports

Opening the silos: India approves 3 million tonnes of wheat and product exports