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, =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.
CITATION STYLE
Murray, L., Cooper, P., Arteche, A., Stein, A., & Tomlinson, M. (2016). Randomized controlled trial of a home-visiting intervention on infant cognitive development in peri-urban South Africa. Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, 58(3), 270–276. https://doi.org/10.1111/dmcn.12873
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