Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON
Description
Abstract Text
DESCRIPTION (Adapted from the Applicant's Abstract): This is a request for
the renewal of the Wisconsin Maternity Leave and Health (WMLH) Project,
which was originally designed to investigate the effect of maternity leave
(e.g., length, return to work full- or part-time or homemaker) and other
psychosocial factors (personality, attitudes, situation) on the health
(physical, mental, and social) of women and their families. The proposed
project aims to build on the WMLH Project by: (a) investigating the
long-term effects on women's health of employment (including maternity
leave) and other aspects of work and family life during the first two years
postpartum; (b) extending the project to investigate the long-term effects
of this early process on children (e.g., temperament, cognitive
maturational status, socioemotional adjustment); and (c) investigating the
complex and reciprocal dynamics between mothers' health and child and
family functioning.
In the WMLH Project, 570 women and 550 of their husbands/partners were
recruited, during the 5th month of pregnancy, from physicians' offices and
clinics in Milwaukee (80 percent) and Madison (20 percent). The women and
men were interviewed separately five times: (a) during the 5th month of
pregnancy; (b) 1 month after delivery; (c) 4 months after the birth; (d) 12
months after the birth; and (e) 2 years after the birth. other-infant
interactions were videotaped at T3 and T4; father-infant interactions were
videotaped for the Madison subsample. Sample retention has been excellent:
attrition rates for mothers were 4 percent from T1 to T2 (half due to
miscarriage), 1 percent from T2 to T3, 2 percent from T3 to T4. At T5, all
T2 respondents were recontracted (n=547); to date, 96 percent have agreed.
Response rates are similar for the men.
The proposed renewal will investigate the longer-term effects on women,
children, and families of the early work-health process, collecting three
additional waves of data when the children are 3 1/2, 4 1/2, and 5 1/2
years. Interviews with mothers and fathers will focus on mental health
(e.g., depression, anxiety); social health (e.g., marriage relationship,
parent-child relationship); employment; and psychosocial factors (e.g.,
personality; attitudes; work/family stressors). Additional measures
proposed for this extension into the preschool years (obtained from both
parents, the childcare provider, and direct assessments of the children)
focus on family functioning (e.g., family environment; sibling
relationships), child outcomes (cognitive maturational status,
socioemotional adjustment), and childcare quality.
To analyze these rich, longitudinal data, a variety of multivariate
statistical techniques (factor analyses, multiple repression, structural
equation modeling) are used to (a) test measurement models, (b) describe
relationships among variables that will serve as a basis for building
longitudinal models, and (c) develop longitudinal models that clarify the
avenues through which women's employment (including maternity leave), plus
key psychosocial factors are linked to the health and functioning of women,
children, and families. Analyses in progress focus on the work-health
process during the first two years postpartum. The additional data
collected in the proposed study will allow us to determine whether (a)
effects found in the original WMLH Project are long-lasting through
preschool; and (b) there are additional health and functioning outcomes for
women, children,a nd families due to delayed effects not manifested in the
first two years postpartum. This data collection is a critical step as
this unique and important sample is followed longitudinally.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
anxietyattitudebehavior testbehavioral /social science research tagchild care personnelchild psychologychild rearingcognitiondepressionemotional adjustmentemployment of womenfamily structure /dynamicsfemalehuman subjectinterviewlongitudinal human studymarriage /marital statusparent offspring interactionpersonalitypostpartumpreschool child (1-5)psychological stressorquestionnairessibling relationssocial adjustmentwomen's health
No Sub Projects information available for 3R01MH044340-09S2
Publications
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