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Early childhood stress responses to psychosocial stressors: The state of the science

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Abstract The aim of this systematic review was to better understand whether and to what extent psychosocial stressors are associated with hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis or autonomic nervous system stress responses in… Click to show full abstract

Abstract The aim of this systematic review was to better understand whether and to what extent psychosocial stressors are associated with hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis or autonomic nervous system stress responses in young children (1–6 years of age). Studies were classified by psychosocial stressors from the ecobiodevelopmental model: social and economic resources, maternal mental health, parent–child relationships, and the physical environment. Of the 2388 identified studies, 32 met full inclusion criteria, including over 9107 children. Child physiologic stress responses were measured as hair and urinary cortisol and cortisone, salivary diurnal and reactive cortisol, salivary reactive alpha‐amylase, and respiratory sinus arrhythmia. There were 107 identified relations between psychosocial stressors and physiologic stress responses. Nearly two thirds of these relations suggested that children have dysregulated stress responses as either significantly blunted (n = 27) or increased (n = 37); 43 relations were not significant. Children most consistently had significantly dysregulated stress responses if they experienced postnatal maternal depression or anxiety. Some reasons for the mixed findings may be related to characteristics of the child (i.e., moderators) or stressor, how the stress response or psychosocial stressor was measured, unmeasured variables (e.g., caregiving buffering), researcher degrees of freedom, or publication bias.

Keywords: stress; early childhood; stress responses; responses psychosocial; psychosocial stressors; childhood stress

Journal Title: Developmental Psychobiology
Year Published: 2022

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