If past natural disasters have taught us anything about their effects on pregnant women and developing babies, it is to pay close attention, for the added stress will surely have an impact on them.
Study: COVID-19 pandemic can affect mothers and infants through immune pathways
If past natural disasters have taught us anything about their effects on pregnant women and developing babies, it is to pay close attention, for the added stress will surely have an impact on them.
Amanda Venta, associate professor of psychology at the University of Houston, is sounding that alarm as it relates to the COVID-19 pandemic in a newly released study published in
Child Psychiatry & Human Development. There is strong evidence to suggest that the coronavirus pandemic will affect mothers and infants through immune pathways that, in previous research, have been shown to link stress and social isolation during the pre- and post-natal periods with deficits in maternal mental health and infant well-being and development across developmental stages, reports Venta.
Strong evidence suggests that the coronavirus pandemic will affect mothers and infants through immune pathways that have, in previous research, shown links to deficits in maternal mental health and infant well-being and development across developmental stages.