In the current study, we observed 12 mothers with a 4-21-month-old infant during their daily activities for around 3 h per dyad, focusing on daily caregiving practices such as feeding, bathing, and soothing in the rural multiple-caregiver cultural contexts of the Andean and Amazonian parts of Peru. Overall, sensitivity levels were high, with an average of 7.33 (out of 9), and 7 out of the 12 mothers scoring in the high range (scores 7-9), and the remaining 5 in the good-enough range (scores 5-6). In-depth descriptions of mother-infant interactions show that these high sensitivity levels reflect mothers' ability to multitask, combining household and agricultural chores with high sensitive responsiveness to their infants' signals. The presence of multiple caregivers seemed to allow mothers to make sure the infants were well attended when they were temporarily unavailable but combined with quick renewed availability if the infant seemed to need maternal proximity.
In the current study, we observed 12 mothers with a 4-21-month-old infant during their daily activities for around 3 h per dyad, focusing on daily caregiving practices such as feeding, bathing, and soothing in the rural multiple-caregiver cultural contexts of the Andean and Amazonian parts of Peru. Overall, sensitivity levels were high, with an average of 7.33 (out of 9), and 7 out of the 12 mothers scoring in the high range (scores 7-9), and the remaining 5 in the good-enough range (scores 5-6). In-depth descriptions of mother-infant interactions show that these high sensitivity levels reflect mothers' ability to multitask, combining household and agricultural chores with high sensitive responsiveness to their infants' signals. The presence of multiple caregivers seemed to allow mothers to make sure the infants were well attended when they were temporarily unavailable but combined with quick renewed availability if the infant seemed to need maternal proximity.
According to attachment theory, mental representations are defined as dynamic cognitive guides that organize both perceptual and behavioral aspects of the self, attachment figure, and relationships with others. Based on this assumption, several studies had reported a relationship between attachment representations and the quality of care provided by mothers to their infants. This study explored on the relationship between maternal attachment representations, assessed by a narrative script task, and the quality of maternal care observed at home. Participants were 32 mothers between 19 and 44 years of age (M = 29.6, SD = 6.28) and their children between 8 and 10 months (M = 8.91, SD = 0.96). The results did not show a significant relationship between global scores of participants' observed care (i.e., maternal sensitivity) and their attachment representations. However, a specific association was found between two dimensions of sensitivity (acceptance and active/animated interactions) and the narrative script that refers to a child's physical injury event. Additionally, mothers who reported early separation experiences with their children showed a significant association between sensitivity and attachment representations on mother-child scripts. Moreover, these mothers showed lower scores on global sensitivity and on specific behavioral care dimensions, such as sensitive response and acceptance to child's signals, than those of mothers that did not report separations early in their children' lives.
IntroducciónLa teoría del apego desarrollada por Bowlby (1969) define el apego como el vínculo afectivo que une al niño con su cuidador principal a través del tiempo y del espacio (Ainsworth, Blehar, Waters & Wall, 1978). Según esta teoría, los seres humanos tienen la necesidad innata de desarrollar el apego con una o varias personas que le proporcionen cuidado y protección. Por esta razón, nacen con una serie de conductas instintivas denominadas conductas de apego -llanto, orientación de la mirada, vocalización, aprehensión, entre otras-, que tienen el objetivo de propiciar la proximidad de su figura de cuidado. Estas conductas de apego, con base en el desarrollo mental y físico del infante, así como en las repetidas experiencias de interacción con su cuidador, se organizan en estrategias especializadas para lograr la proximidad física o afectiva con la figura de apego, mientras que, de forma paralela, desarrolla conductas de exploración dirigidas a conocer y manejar el entorno físico y social; conductas que le permitirán alejarse paulatinamente Construct and criterion validity evidences of the Massie-Campbell Scale of Attachment During Stress (ADS)
In the present study, we show that SARS-CoV-2 can infect palatine tonsils and adenoids in children without symptoms of COVID-19, with no history of recent upper airway infection. We studied 48 children undergoing tonsillectomy due to snoring/OSA or recurrent tonsillitis between October 2020 and September 2021. Briefly, nasal cytobrush (NC), nasal wash (NW) and tonsillar tissue fragments obtained at surgery were tested by RT-PCR, immunohistochemistry (IHC), flow cytometry and neutralization assay. We detected the presence of SARS-CoV-2 in at least one specimen tested in 25% of patients (20% in palatine tonsils and 16.27% in adenoids, 10.41% of NC and 6.25% of NW). Importantly, in 2 of the children there was evidence of laboratory-confirmed acute infection 2 and 5 months before surgery. IHC revealed the presence of SARS-CoV-2 nucleoprotein in epithelial surface and in lymphoid cells in both extrafollicular and follicular regions, in adenoids and palatine tonsils. Flow cytometry showed that CD20+B lymphocytes were the most infected phenotypes by SARS-CoV-2 NP, followed by CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes, and CD14+ macrophages and dendritic cells. Additionally, IF indicated that SARS-CoV-2-infected tonsillar tissues had increased expression of ACE2 and TMPRSS2. NGS sequencing demonstrated the presence of different SARS CoV-2 variants in tonsils from different tissues. SARS-CoV-2 antigen detection was not restricted to tonsils, but was also detected in nasal cells from the olfactory region. In conclusion, palatine tonsils and adenoids are sites of prolonged infection by SARS-CoV-2 in children, even without COVID-19 symptoms.
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