Mo. Johnson, Mother-infant interaction and maternal substance use/abuse: An integrativereview of research literature in the 1990s, ONL J K S N, 8(2), 2001, pp. NIL_1-NIL_18
Purpose
(1) Mother-infant interaction is crucial for optimal infant development and
parenting. In the environment of prenatal substance use/abuse there is pot
ential for both mother and child to present negative interactive behaviors.
Recent increased incidence of substance use/abuse by pregnant women in the
United States has provoked concern for the infant's outcome in these circu
mstances. Recent literature does not indicate a uniformly dismal outlook fo
r infants born exposed to drugs. In this paper, published research from the
1990s that specifically addressed the relationship between prenatal substa
nce use/abuse and the mother-infant interaction was examined utilizing the
Barnard model of parent-infant interaction as a guide. Twenty-three article
s matched search criteria and were included in the review.
Conclusions
(2) The majority of studies (14/23) showed that maternal substance abuse wa
s associated with a recognizably detrimental impact on mother-child interac
tion. Six studies did not confirm an adverse effect. Negative impact on the
interaction was related to the degree of maternal substance abuse in three
studies and to its continuation postnatally in two. Postnatal environment
correlated strongly with the quality of mother-child interaction in the sub
stance-exposed dyads.
Implications
(3) Clinical and research implications are described.