Mothers' beliefs about the causes of infant growth deficiency: Is there attributional bias?

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Abstract

Tested for defensive attributional bias in mothers' causal explanations for infant (2-12.5 months) growth deficiency. Mothers of healthy babies (controls; n = 82), growth deficient babies without medical problems (n = 27) and growth-deficient babies with mild medical problems (n = 22) rated their levels of agreement with 23 causes of growth problems which were designed to vary in the degree of personal threat to parenting self-esteem. Ratings were completed for the mother's (Own) baby and for a nonspecific (Other) baby. Findings partially support a theory of defensive attributional bias, with higher agreement when causes referred to Other (vs. Own) baby, and lower agreement with family-related than with medical/nutritional causes. Factors that may have influenced material experience of threat and implications of the findings for clinical practice are discussed.

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Sturm, L. A., Drotar, D., Laing, K., & Zimet, G. D. (1997). Mothers’ beliefs about the causes of infant growth deficiency: Is there attributional bias? Journal of Pediatric Psychology, 22(3), 329–344. https://doi.org/10.1093/jpepsy/22.3.329

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