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    Non-linear associations between HPA axis activity during infancy and mental health difficulties during early childhood among children in rural Pakistan
    Frost, A ; Hagaman, A ; Baranov, V ; Chung, EO ; Bhalotra, S ; Sikander, S ; Maselko, J (CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, 2023-10)
    Hypothalamic pituitary adrenal (HPA) axis activity may be a mechanism linking early adversity to child mental health difficulties. However, there is a dearth of longitudinal evidence for the association between HPA axis activity and mental health among children in low-resource contexts. The goal of this study is to examine linear and curvilinear associations between HPA axis activity during infancy and mental health difficulties in early childhood among children in rural Pakistan. Participants included 104 children (46% male) from the Bachpan study, a longitudinal cohort embedded within a maternal depression trial in Pakistan. We examined the associations between hair-derived cortisol and dehydroepiandosterone (DHEA) at 12 months old and mental health difficulties, measured with the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ), at 36 months old. There was a significant quadratic association between hair cortisol and SDQ scores, with results showing a U-shaped relationship (i.e., having relatively high or low cortisol predicted increased mental health difficulties). DHEA showed a quadratic association with SDQ scores with an inverted U-shaped relationship (i.e., high and low DHEA was associated with decreased mental health difficulties). Results provide evidence of longitudinal and curvilinear effects of cortisol and DHEA during infancy on mental health difficulties in early childhood.
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    The impact of COVID-related economic shocks on household mental health in Pakistan
    Baranov, V ; Grosjean, P ; Khan, FJ ; Walker, S (WILEY, 2022-10)
    We combine data collected just prior to the unfolding of COVID-19 with follow-up data from July 2020 to document the adverse economic effects of the pandemic and resulting impact on parental and child mental well-being in peri-urban Pakistan. 22% of the households in our sample are affected by job loss, with monthly income down 38% on average. Our difference-in-difference results show that job loss is associated with a 0.88 standard deviation (SD) increase in adult mental distress scores (K10), a 0.43 SD reduction in a Hope index of children's aspirations, agency and future pathways, and a 0.39 SD increase in children's depression symptoms. In addition, we observe higher levels of parental stress and anger reported by children, as well as an increase in reported prevalence of domestic violence. Overall, we document that the pandemic has disproportionately and negatively affected the economic and mental well-being of the most vulnerable households in our sample.
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    Effects of a maternal psychosocial intervention on hair derived biomarkers of HPA axis function in mothers and children in rural Pakistan.
    Baranov, V ; Frost, A ; Hagaman, A ; Simmons, JG ; Manzoor, MS ; Biroli, P ; Bhalotra, S ; Rahman, A ; Sikander, S ; Maselko, J (Elsevier BV, 2022-12)
    OBJECTIVE: Disruptions in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis are thought to be key neuroendocrine mechanisms involved in psychopathology and may have intergenerational impacts. Hair-derived HPA hormones offer a measure of long-term HPA axis activity that may be useful in assessing maternal and infant health. Building on a community-based randomized control trial of a perinatal depression intervention in Pakistan, we examine intervention effects on HPA axis activity in a subsample of mothers and infants. METHODS: HPA axis activity was assessed using hair-derived cortisol, cortisone, and dehydroepiandosterone (DHEA). Hair samples were collected from mother-child dyads at one year postpartum from prenatally depressed women randomized to a cognitive-behavioral intervention (n = 35 dyads) or to enhanced usual care (n = 37 dyads), and from a comparison sample of women who screened negative for depression in pregnancy (n = 35 dyads). RESULTS: The intervention group had 38 percent (p=0.01) lower maternal cortisol levels and 45 percent (p < 0.01) lower maternal cortisone compared to the EUC group. Maternal DHEA levels were higher among women in the intervention group compared to the EUC group by 29 percent (p = 0.02). Intergenerational intervention effects show higher DHEA levels in infants by 43% (p = 0.03). Infant cortisol and cortisone did not differ across groups. CONCLUSIONS: Results suggest that the perinatal depression intervention has effects on HPA axis activity in both mothers and children, providing evidence that treating maternal depression may impact physiological stress system functioning intergenerationally. In addition, utilizing hair-derived biomarkers of HPA-axis activity is a potentially useful clinical indicator of intervention impacts on the neuroendocrine system.
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    Adverse childhood experiences and implications of perceived stress, anxiety and cortisol among women in Pakistan: a cross-sectional study
    Ikram, N ; Frost, A ; LeMasters, K ; Hagaman, A ; Baranov, V ; Gallis, J ; Sikander, S ; Scherer, E ; Maselko, J (BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP, 2022-04)
    OBJECTIVES: Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are linked to poor maternal mental health. The goal of this study is to examine the associations between ACEs and multiple manifestations of stress (including perceived stress, anxiety and cortisol) among mothers in rural Pakistan. DESIGN: This study used a cross-sectional design. Mothers were originally recruited during their third trimester of pregnancy and followed until 36 months post partum. Cortisol was collected at 12 months post partum, and self-report data were collected at 36 months post partum. SETTING: All participants reside in rural villages in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. The measures were administered at home visits by field interviewers. PARTICIPANTS: Data were collected from 889 mothers. All mothers in the sample provided data on ACEs and perceived stress, 623 provided data on anxiety and 90 provided hair cortisol. PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOMES MEASURES: ACEs were captured retrospectively using an adapted version of the ACE International Questionnaire, and represented as a continuous variable and subdomains (neglect, home violence, family psychological distress, community violence). Primary outcomes included perceived stress measured with the Cohen Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) and anxiety measured with the Generalised Anxiety Disorder-7 scale (GAD-7). Hair-derived cortisol was included as a secondary outcome. Generalised linear models with cluster-robust SEs were used to estimate associations between ACEs and the outcome variables. RESULTS: All models featured positive associations between ACE items and PSS. The continuous total ACE score (B=0.4; 95% CI 0.0 to 0.8) was associated with higher anxiety symptoms on the GAD-7. Home violence (B=6.7; 95% CI 2.7 to 10.8) and community violence (B=7.5; 95% CI 1.4 to 13.6) were associated with increased hair cortisol production. CONCLUSIONS: All four ACE domains were associated with elevated levels of perceived stress, anxiety and cortisol, with varying precision and strength of estimates, indicating that the type of ACE has a differential impact. This study informed our understanding of the differential impact of specific ACEs on perceived stress, anxiety and hypothalamic pituitary adrenal-axis functioning, providing implications for future clinical intervention and research development.
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    Association of maternal depression and home adversities with infant hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis biomarkers in rural Pakistan
    Hagaman, AK ; Baranov, V ; Chung, E ; LeMasters, K ; Andrabi, N ; Bates, LM ; Rahman, A ; Sikander, S ; Turner, E ; Maselko, J (Elsevier, 2020-11-01)
    Background: Each year, almost 35% of children are exposed to maternal depression and more grow up in persistent poverty, increasing the risk for stress-related disease and other socio-developmental deficits later in life. These impacts are likely related to chronic stress via the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. However, there is little evidence relating early windows of child HPA axis activity to multiple exposures. Methods: We investigated chronic measures of hair-derived HPA axis hormones (cortisol and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA)) in 104 one-year old infants from rural Pakistan and longitudinal measures of maternal depression, intimate partner violence (IPV), socio-economic status (SES), and the home environment. Results: Estimates from adjusted linear mixed effects models did not reveal consistent significant associations between infant cortisol and maternal depression or home adversities. By contrast, infants exposed to maternal depression during pregnancy had lower DHEA levels (ß= -0.18 95% confidence interval [CI]: -0.34, -0.02) as did those whose mothers experienced multiple types of IPV (ß=-4.14 95% CI: -7.42, -0.79) within one year postpartum. Higher SES had a significant positive association with infant DHEA levels (ß= 0.77 95% CI: 0.08, 1.47). Depression severity and chronicity at one year postpartum had near significant associations with infant DHEA. Measures of home environment had no observable impacts on infant HPA axis activity. Limitations: Limitations include the modest sample size and aggregation of hair samples for analysis. Conclusion: Results point to possible early HPA axis dysregulation driven by changes in DHEA activity, but not cortisol at one year of age. Findings contribute to growing research examining intergenerational transmissions of maternal depression, IPV, and household environment on infant stress-response systems.
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    The contribution of grandmother involvement to child growth and development: an observational study in rural Pakistan
    Chung, EO ; Hagaman, A ; LeMasters, K ; Andrabi, N ; Baranov, V ; Bates, LM ; Gallis, JA ; O'Donnell, K ; Rahman, A ; Sikander, S ; Turner, EL ; Maselko, J (BMJ Publishing Group, 2020-08)
    INTRODUCTION: Early childhood interventions primarily focus on the mother-child relationship, but grandmothers are often critical in childcare in low-resource settings. Prior research is mixed on how grandmother involvement influences child outcomes and there is a paucity of research on grandmother caregiving in low-income and middle-income countries. We examined the role of grandmother involvement on child growth and development in the first 2 years of life cross sectionally and longitudinally in rural Pakistan. METHODS: We used data from the Bachpan Cohort, a longitudinal birth cohort in rural Pakistan. Maternally reported grandmother involvement in daily instrumental and non-instrumental caregiving was collected at 3 and 12 months. A summed score was created and categorised into non-involved, low and high. Outcomes included 12-month and 24-month child growth, 12-month Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development and 24-month Ages and Stages Questionnaire-Socioemotional. We used multivariable generalised linear models to estimate mean differences (MD) at 12 months (n=727) and 24 months (n=712). Inverse probability weighting was used to account for missingness and sampling. RESULTS: In our sample, 68% of children lived with a grandmother, and most grandmothers were involved in caregiving. Greater 3-month grandmother involvement was positively associated with 12-month weight z-scores; however, greater involvement was associated with lower 24-month weight z-scores. High 12-month grandmother involvement was associated with improved 12-month cognitive (MD=0.38, 95% CI -0.01 to 0.76), fine motor skills (MD=0.45, 95% CI 0.08 to 0.83) and 24-month socioemotional development (MD=-17.83, 95% CI -31.47 to -4.19). No meaningful associations were found for length z-scores or language development. CONCLUSION: In rural Pakistan, grandmothers provide caregiving that influences early child development. Our findings highlight the complex relationship between grandmother involvement and child weight, and suggest that grandmothers may positively promote early child cognitive, fine motor and socioemotional development. Understanding how grandmother involvement affects child outcomes in early life is necessary to inform caregiving interventions.
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    Can Positive Psychology Improve Psychological Well-being and Economic Decision-Making? Experimental Evidence from Kenya
    Baranov, V ; Haushofer, J ; Jang, C (University of Chicago Press, 2020-07-01)
    We conduct a randomized experiment to evaluate the effect of a light-touch low-cost psychological intervention on psychological well-being and economic decision-making in a developingcountry setting. Residents of an informal settlement in Kenya were randomly assigned to participate in best-practice exercises designed to promote gratitude, self-affirmation, and aspirations. We show that although we were successful in manipulating the psychological construct (reported gratitude increased 0.3SD), there is no evidence that the intervention affected overall psychological well-being, beliefs, or aspirations. We also see no effects on real-incentive tasks measuring cognitive control or temporal discounting. Our results are important because lighttouch positive psychology interventions are being widely promoted in workplaces and schools worldwide as a low-cost solution to dramatically improve psychological well-being.