Publication | Closed Access
Caregiving and Early Infant Crying in a Danish Community
32
Citations
50
References
2004
Year
Parental CareEmpathyEducationMental HealthDanish CommunitySocial SciencesPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyMaternal CaregivingChild CareDanish Caregiving PracticesBehavioral IssueResponsive CaregivingSocial CareBehavioral SciencesCaregiverEarly Childhood DevelopmentMaternal HealthChild DevelopmentPediatrics
Maternal caregiving and fussing/crying in Danish infants at 3, 6, and 12 weeks were examined using self-report scales and 24-hour behavior diaries. Mothers reported practices commonly associated with responsive caregiving: frequent feeding, prompt response to infant cries, and considerable time holding the infant. Fuss/cry durations peaked in the first 2 months, were highest in evenings, and decreased approximately 50% by 12 weeks. Fussing was the majority behavior, and 9.2% of the infants fussed and cried more than 3 hours per day. In contrast with other Western studies, 24-hour fuss/cry durations were lower, and fussing accounted for up to 80% of total distress. Danish caregiving practices may partially explain the lower durations of infant distress and the lower ratio of cry to fuss. However, some infants fuss/cry a great deal despite sensitive care, which may reflect individual differences in infant maturation of behavior regulation.
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