What Parents Know Matters: Parental Knowledge at Birth Predicts Caregiving Behaviors at 9 Months

Author/s: 
Leung, C.Y., Suskind, D.L.
Date Added: 
January 25, 2020
Journal/Publication: 
The Journal of Pediatrics
Publication Date: 
January 1, 2020
Type: 
Clinical Research Results
Format: 
Article
DOI (1): 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2019.12.021 showArticle

RPR Commentary

A reminder to assess parental knowledge of infant growth and development at the first well child check and to provide education as needed.  The first year of life is arguably the most critical period of human psychological and cognitive development.  James W. Mold, MD, MPH

Abstract

Objective

To examine the mediating role of socioeconomically disadvantaged parents' knowledge of early cognitive and language development at the first postpartum visit in the relation between education and caregiving behaviors at 9 months.

Study design

Parental knowledge was assessed at the 1-week newborn visit (n = 468); anticipatory guidance received and desired at 1-month (n = 212) and 6-month (n = 191) visits were reported; and caregiving behaviors toward infants during a teaching task were observed at 9-month visit (n = 173).

Results

We found substantial variation in knowledge and caregiving behaviors. Parents who had more knowledge of infant development at 1 week were more likely to respond to cues (r = 0.18; P < .05) and foster social-emotional (r = 0.17; P < .05) and cognitive growth (r = 0.20; P < .05) at 9 months. Importantly, the indirect effect of education on cognitive growth fostering at 9 months through knowledge at 1 week was significant, controlling for primary language and number of other children in the home (infancy: β = 0.06; B = 0.07; SE = 0.04; 95% CI, 0.007-0.165; early childhood: β = 0.04; B = 0.06; SE = 0.03; 95% CI, 0.008-0.152). Open-ended responses indicated that anticipatory guidance in the first 6 months focused on infant physical growth; however, parents did not request additional anticipatory guidance from their pediatricians.

Conclusions

This study sheds light on the importance of promoting parental knowledge about cognitive and language development to foster parental cognitive stimulations and language inputs during the first year of life. This study highlights the important role of anticipatory guidance on cognitive and language development during the earliest well-child visits and the need to better understand parental baseline knowledge to tailor anticipatory guidance to the family strengths and needs.

Text Availability

Free full text