Mother-Child Relationships During Pregnancy Among Bofi Foragers
NCT ID: NCT00342225
Last Updated: 2017-07-02
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
60 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2002-12-19
2006-12-21
Brief Summary
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* How pregnant mothers treat their children, in terms of caregiving techniques;
* Whether mothers exhibit different caregiving patterns at different stages of pregnancy;
* Whether mother-child conflicts arise during pregnancy, and, if so, when during pregnancy they are most likely to occur; and;
* Whether offspring overtly resist changes in maternal behavior during pregnancy, and, if so, what behaviors children use to resist these changes.
All pregnant Bofi forager women living in settlements near the villages of Ngotto, Poutem, Bambondji, and Grima (in the Central African Republic) who have one or more living offspring and have no serious health problems related to pregnancy may be eligible for this study. Bofi foragers are among the few remaining hunters and gatherers and, as such, offer an opportunity to examine child developmental theories that have been well studied among industrialized Euro-American cultures, but neglected cross-culturally. Furthermore, studies among contemporary hunter-gatherers provide insight into the evolutionary past of humans, as humans have lived as hunter-gatherers for about 99 percent of prehistory.
Participating pregnant Bofi forager women will be interviewed for demographic information, family genealogy, fertility history, and parenting beliefs. The women and their children will be observed for 4 hours on two different days as they carry out their normal daily activities. Attention will be paid to the mother's investment in terms of direct care of the children, including behaviors such as holding, cleaning, comforting, grooming, and feeding children.
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Detailed Description
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This study proposes to document mother-child interactions when forager mothers are at different stages of pregnancy through naturalistic observations of public behavior, as well as measures including: the approximate week of pregnancy, maternal beliefs about child-care, and demographic features of families. The data will be analyzed statistically and used to evaluate Trivers' parent-offspring theory, as well as to evaluate the validity of claims by Western scholars about universal features of parent-child relationships. The foragers provide an excellent opportunity to examine child developmental theories that have been well studied among industrialized Euro-American cultures, but neglected cross-culturally. Furthermore, studies among contemporary hunter-gatherer groups, such as the foragers in Congo, provide insight into the evolutionary past of humans, as humans have lived as hunter-gatherers for approximately 99% of prehistory, and the few remaining groups are disappearing rapidly (Phillipson 1993).
Conditions
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Eligibility Criteria
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Exclusion Criteria
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
NIH
Locations
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Central African Republic
Ngotto, , Central African Republic
Republic of Condo
Sangha, , Central African Republic
Countries
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References
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Hewlett BS, Lamb ME, Shannon D, Leyendecker B, Scholmerich A. Culture and early infancy among central African foragers and farmers. Dev Psychol. 1998 Jul;34(4):653-61. doi: 10.1037//0012-1649.34.4.653.
Other Identifiers
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03-CH-N073
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: secondary_id
999903073
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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