Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychiatry Duke University Durham NC USA
2. Department of Pediatrics Duke University Durham NC USA
3. Brown Center for the Study of Children at Risk, Department of Psychiatry and Pediatrics Alpert Medical School of Brown University and Women and Infants Hospital of Rhode Island Providence RI USA
Abstract
Opioid use during pregnancy impacts the health and well‐being of two generations: the pregnant person and the child. The factors that increase risk for opioid use in the adult, as well as those that perpetuate risk for the caregiver and child, oftentimes replicate across generations and may be more likely to affect child neurodevelopment than the opioid exposure itself. In this article, we review the prenatal opioid exposure literature with the perspective that this is not a singular event but an intergenerational cascade of events. We highlight several mechanisms of transmission across generations: biological factors, including genetics and epigenetics and the gut–brain axis; parent–child mechanisms, such as prepregnancy experience of child maltreatment, quality of parenting, infant behaviors, neonatal opioid withdrawal diagnosis, and broader environmental contributors including poverty, violence exposure, stigma, and Child Protective Services involvement. We conclude by describing ways in which intergenerational transmission can be disrupted by early intervention.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Cited by
7 articles.
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