Risk of Global Developmental Delay in Infants Born from Mothers with COVID-19: A Cross-Sectional Study
Risk of Global Developmental Delay in Infants Born from Mothers with COVID-19: A Cross-Sectional Study
Authors
Silva, Pedro Ykaro Fialho
da Cruz, Maria Clara Lima
Azevedo, Ingrid Guerra
Moreira, Rafaela Silva
Sousa, Klayton Galante
Pereira, Silvana Alves
da Cruz, Maria Clara Lima
Azevedo, Ingrid Guerra
Moreira, Rafaela Silva
Sousa, Klayton Galante
Pereira, Silvana Alves
Profesor GuĆa
Authors
Date
Datos de publicaciĆ³n:
10.2147/IJWH.S389291
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WOMENS HEALTH,Vol.15,467-474,2023
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WOMENS HEALTH,Vol.15,467-474,2023
Tipo de recurso
Article
Keywords
Materia geogrƔfica
Collections
Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the risk of global developmental delay in infants born from mothers with COVID-19.Patients and Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted between March and November 2021, with 54 infants of both sexes aged between 1 and 12 months. Twenty-seven infants born from mothers diagnosed with COVID-19 during pregnancy composed the COVID-19 group, whereas infants born from mothers not exposed to COVID-19 composed the control group. Medical records and child health booklets provided neonatal and prenatal data. The Survey of Wellbeing of Young Children screened the risk of global developmental delay during a phone interview or home visit. Chi-squared, Mann-Whitney test, and binary logistic regression were applied.Results: The risk of motor developmental delay was identified in 15 infants (12 in the COVID-19 group), while 36 were at risk of behavioral alteration (22 in the COVID-19 group). The COVID-19 group presented a 6.3-fold risk of motor developmental delay. Motor developmental delay was also significantly associated with socioemotional alterations (odds ratio = 6.4, p = 0.01). Regarding families of infants in the COVID-19 group, 63% of the mothers presented risk of depression, 51.9% risk of substance abuse, 40.7% risk of food insecurity, and 7.4% risk of domestic violence. The inflexibility subscale of the survey was a statistically relevant variable for the socioemotional domain.Conclusion: Infants born from mothers with COVID-19 were at high risk of motor developmental delay and socioemotional alterations. Although, this study fills an important gap in the literature regarding the influence of maternal exposure to COVID-19 on infant development, new studies screening families with infants at risk of developmental delay may significantly impact maternal and child health-related indicators, such as physical health, emotional development and social behavior.