Abstract
One in 12 children is born before 37 completed weeks of gestation and during the last decades survival rates and developmental outcomes of even very premature children have significantly improved. As a result, mental health sequelae of preterm birth are more frequently addressed. The manifestation of a distinct psychopathological profile with co-occurrence of symptoms associated with attention deficit/hyperactivity, autism spectrum and anxiety disorders has been recognized and discussed as “preterm behavioral phenotype”, mainly affecting high-risk children with very low birth weights. Current research findings on parental psychological distress and early childhood developmental conditions after preterm birth indicate contextual factors that are of relevance, also for clinicians in psychotherapeutic practice.
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Bindt, C. (2022). Preterm birth: a risk for mental health?: Interaction between parental distress and early childhood conditions of development. Psychotherapeut, 67(1), 28–33. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00278-021-00552-z
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