Abstract
While infant behaviour is influenced by maternal care, infant crying and dysregulated sleep can reciprocally affect maternal mood. The temperament and behaviour of two 4 – 12-months-old infant cohorts admitted with their mothers to a residential parenting program were examined using behaviour charts and the Short Infant Temperament Questionnaire (SITQ). One group was re-assessed one and six months later. Infant temperament was significantly more difficult than population norms and most had dysregulated sleep. One month after treatment, total infant crying and fussing, frequency of night-time waking, and sleep and feeding dysregulation were significantly (p < .001) reduced, with change sustained at six months. Easy-Difficult scores (SITQ) were stable and significantly worse than population norms. The contribution of a “difficult” infant temperament to maternal mood disorder warrants further investigation.
Acknowledgements
The financial support of the Nurses Board of Victoria and Mayne Health, the generous assistance of the Masada Private Hospital Mother Baby Unit nursing staff and editorial assistance of Ms Amy Timoshanko are acknowledged with gratitude.