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Randomized controlled trial of a home‐visiting intervention on infant cognitive development in peri‐urban South Africa
Author(s) -
Murray Lynne,
Cooper Peter,
Arteche Adriane,
Stein Alan,
Tomlinson Mark
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
developmental medicine and child neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.658
H-Index - 143
eISSN - 1469-8749
pISSN - 0012-1622
DOI - 10.1111/dmcn.12873
Subject(s) - peri , intervention (counseling) , randomized controlled trial , medicine , infant development , child development , pediatrics , cognitive development , cognition , psychology , developmental psychology , nursing , psychiatry
Aim To determine whether, in an impoverished South African community, an intervention that benefitted infant attachment also benefitted cognitive development. Method Pregnant females were randomized to intervention ( n =220) and no‐treatment control groups ( n =229). The intervention was home‐based parenting support for attachment, delivered until 6 months postpartum. At 18 months, infants were assessed on attachment and cognitive development (Bayley Scales Mental Development Index [ MDI ]) ( n =127 intervention, n =136 control participants). Infant MDI was examined in relation to intervention, socio‐economic risk, antenatal depression, and infant sex and attachment. Results Overall, there was little effect of the intervention on MDI ( p =0.094, d =0.20), but there was an interaction between intervention and risk ( p =0.03, η p 2 =0.02). MDI scores of infants of lower risk intervention group mothers were, on average, 4.84 points higher than those of other infants ( p =0.002, d =0.41). Antenatal depression was not significant once intervention and risk were controlled ( p =0.08); there was no association between infant MDI and either sex ( p =0.41) or attachment ( p =0.56). Interpretation Parenting interventions for infant cognitive development may benefit from inclusion of specific components to support infant cognition beyond those that support attachment, and may be most effective for infants over 6 months. They may need augmentation with other input where adversity is extreme.