Children whose mothers were overly stressed during pregnancy are more likely to become victims of bullying at school, a new study has found. Scientists from the University of Warwick have shown that stress and mental health problems in pregnant women may affect the developing baby and directly increases the risk of the child being victimised in later life. The study is based on 8,829 children from the Avon Longtitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC). “This is the first study to investigate stress in pregnancy and a child’s vulnerability to being bullied. When we are exposed to stress, large quantities of neurohormones are released into the blood stream and in a pregnant woman this can change the developing foetus’ own stress response system,” Professor Dieter Wolke, Professor of Developmental Psychology at University of Warwick and Warwick Medical School, who led the study, said. “Changes in the stress response system can affect behaviour and how children react emotionally to stress such as being picked on by a bully. Children who more easily show a stress reaction such as crying, running away, anxiety are then selected by bullies to home in to.” The research team identified the main prenatal stress factors as severe family problems, such as financial difficulty or alcohol/drug abuse, and maternal mental health. “The whole thing becomes a vicious cycle, a child with an altered stress response system is more likely to be bullied, which affects their stress response even further and increases the likelihood of them developing mental health problems in later life,” Professor Wolke added. The study has been published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. ANI
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