The emotional bond that a mother feels towards her
baby is critical to social, emotional and cognitive development.
Maternal health and wellbeing through pregnancy and
antenatal bonding also play a key role in determining bonding
postnatally, but the extent to which these relationships may be
disrupted by poor mental health or substance use is unclear.
This study aimed to examine the extent to which mother-fetal
bonding, substance use and mental health through pregnancy
predicted postnatal mother-infant bonding at 8 weeks. Participants
were 372 women recruited from three metropolitan
hospitals in Australia. Data was collected during trimesters
one, two and three of pregnancy and 8 weeks postnatal using the Maternal Antenatal Attachment Scale (MAAS), Maternal
Postnatal Attachment Scale (MPAS), the Edinburgh Antenatal
and Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), the Depression and
Anxiety Scales (DASS-21), frequency and quantity of substance
use (caffeine, alcohol and tobacco) as well as a range
of demographic and postnatal information. Higher antenatal
bonding predicted higher postnatal bonding at all pregnancy
time-points in a fully adjusted regression model. Maternal
depressive symptoms in trimesters two and three and stress
in trimester two were inversely related to poorer mother-infant
bonding 8 weeks postnatally. This study extends previous
work on the mother’s felt bond to her developing child by
drawing on a large sample of women and documenting the
pattern of this bond at three time points in pregnancy and at
8 weeks postnatally. Utilising multiple antenatal waves
allowed precision in isolating the relationships in pregnancy
and at key intervention points. Investigating methods to
enhance bonding and intervene in pregnancy is needed. It
is also important to assess maternal mental health through
pregnancy.