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The Protective Effects of Father Involvement for Infants of Teen Mothers with Depressive Symptoms

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Abstract

The purpose of this study is to examine the role of father involvement on infant distress among children born to teen mothers, particularly those who are depressed. 119 teen mothers (<20 years) and their infants (<6 months) enrolled in a quasi-experimental trial of a comprehensive pediatric primary care program. Data were drawn from mother-reported questionnaires administered at baseline, before participation in the intervention or comparison conditions. 29 % of teen mothers screened positive for depression. Mothers reported that 78 % of fathers were engaged with their children, typically seeing them a few times per month, and 71 % took financial responsibility for their children. In a multiple linear regression, father responsibility predicted lower infant distress, maternal depression predicted higher infant distress, and there was a significant interaction in which father engagement buffered the effect of maternal depression on infant distress. Fathers may be a protective resource for children born to teen mothers, even as early as the first 6 months of life, potentially mitigating the heightened risk associated with maternal depression in the postpartum period.

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Acknowledgments

This study was funded by HRSA Maternal and Child Health Bureau Research Program, Grant #R40MC21512. The authors would also like to acknowledge support from the Clinical and Translational Science Institute at Children’s National (CTSI_CN).

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Correspondence to Amy Lewin.

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Lewin, A., Mitchell, S.J., Waters, D. et al. The Protective Effects of Father Involvement for Infants of Teen Mothers with Depressive Symptoms. Matern Child Health J 19, 1016–1023 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-014-1600-2

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