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      Selected predictors of maternal-fetal attachment in pregnancies with congenital disorders, other complications, and in healthy pregnancies

      research-article
      Health Psychology Report
      Termedia Publishing House
      high-risk pregnancy, pregnancy experience, prenatal attachment

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          Abstract

          BACKGROUND

          The mother-infant attachment begins to form during pregnancy and is important for the future development of the child. Pregnancy complications can affect this relationship. The purpose of the study was to identify predictors of maternal-fetal attachment in physiological and high-risk pregnancies.

          PARTICIPANTS AND PROCEDURE

          The study group included women in pregnancies with congenital disorders ( n = 65) or with other pregnancy complications ( n = 65). A third group included women in healthy pregnancies ( n = 65). Data were collected by: the Maternal-Fetal Attachment Scale, the Questionnaire of Attachment Styles, the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, the Social Support Scale, a standardized interview, the Dependency on Intimate Partner Scale, and the Pregnancy Experiences Scale.

          RESULTS

          No significant differences in maternal-fetal attachment (MFA) were found between the groups. No predictors of MFA were observed for the women with a pregnancy with a congenital disorder. In the group of pregnancies with other complications, the only predictor of attachment intensity was pregnancy experience: a more negative attitude toward pregnancy was associated with lower MFA. In physiological pregnancies, MFA was found to be determined by pregnancy experience, gestational age, maternal age and dependency on one’s intimate partner. MFA increased as pregnancy progressed. Younger mothers in physiological pregnancies, who have more positive pregnancy experiences and are less dependent on a partner, achieve higher levels of MFA.

          CONCLUSIONS

          The presence of high-risk pregnancy, or its absence, does not differentiate the intensity of the emotional bond between mother and fetus. However, women with healthy pregnancies demonstrate different predictors of MFA than those with high-risk pregnancies.

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          Most cited references70

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          Romantic love conceptualized as an attachment process.

          This article explores the possibility that romantic love is an attachment process--a biosocial process by which affectional bonds are formed between adult lovers, just as affectional bonds are formed earlier in life between human infants and their parents. Key components of attachment theory, developed by Bowlby, Ainsworth, and others to explain the development of affectional bonds in infancy, were translated into terms appropriate to adult romantic love. The translation centered on the three major styles of attachment in infancy--secure, avoidant, and anxious/ambivalent--and on the notion that continuity of relationship style is due in part to mental models (Bowlby's "inner working models") of self and social life. These models, and hence a person's attachment style, are seen as determined in part by childhood relationships with parents. Two questionnaire studies indicated that relative prevalence of the three attachment styles is roughly the same in adulthood as in infancy, the three kinds of adults differ predictably in the way they experience romantic love, and attachment style is related in theoretically meaningful ways to mental models of self and social relationships and to relationship experiences with parents. Implications for theories of romantic love are discussed, as are measurement problems and other issues related to future tests of the attachment perspective.
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            • Record: found
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            Social support measurement

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              Development of a tool for the measurement of maternal attachment during pregnancy.

              M Cranley (2015)
              A 24-item scale with five subscales was developed to measure the construct of maternal-fetal attachment during pregnancy and tested on 71 subjects in the third trimester of pregnancy. Content validity was built into the scale. A coefficient of reliability of .85 was demonstrated for the scale with the reliability of the subscales ranging from .52 to .73. Scores of the MFA scale were positively correlated with the amount of available social support reported by women and with their perceptions of babies three days after birth. There was a negative association between MFA scores and the amount of stress perceived by the women. Further refinement of the scale is indicated.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Health Psychol Rep
                Health Psychol Rep
                HPR
                Health Psychology Report
                Termedia Publishing House
                2353-4184
                2353-5571
                15 July 2020
                2021
                : 9
                : 3
                : 193-206
                Affiliations
                [1]Institute of Psychology, University of Lodz, Lodz, Poland
                Author notes
                CORRESPONDING AUTHOR – Marta Kucharska, Ph.D., Institute of Psychology, University of Lodz, 10/12 Smugowa Str., 91-433 Lodz, Poland, e-mail: marta.kucharska@ 123456uni.lodz.pl
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5004-7275
                Article
                123948
                10.5114/hpr.2020.97295
                10694702
                38084226
                a976a6b6-af8f-4430-b9d7-591dd7ba4a29
                Copyright © Institute of Psychology, University of Gdansk

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/)

                History
                : 07 April 2020
                : 13 June 2020
                : 15 June 2020
                Categories
                Original Article

                high-risk pregnancy,pregnancy experience,prenatal attachment

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