• People who were children when their pare

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Wed Sep 9 21:30:40 2020
    People who were children when their parents divorced have less 'love
    hormone'

    Date:
    September 9, 2020
    Source:
    Baylor University
    Summary:
    People who were children when their parents were divorced showed
    lower levels of oxytocin -- the so-called 'love hormone' --
    when they were adults than those whose parents remained married,
    according to a new study. The lower level may play a role in having
    trouble forming attachments when they are grown.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== People who were children when their parents were divorced showed lower
    levels of oxytocin -- the so-called "love hormone" -- when they were
    adults than those whose parents remained married, according to a study
    led by Baylor University.

    That lower level may play a role in having trouble forming attachments
    when they are grown.


    ========================================================================== Oxytocin -- secreted in the brain and released during bonding experiences
    such as delivery of a baby or sexual interaction or nursing, even being
    hugged by a romantic partner -- has been shown in previous research to be important for social behavior and emotional attachments in early life. The oxytocin system also has been linked to parenting, attachment and anxiety.

    The new study, published in the Journal of Comparative Psychology, delves
    into an area that has not been well researched -- a link between oxytocin, early experience and adult outcomes.

    "Since the rates of divorce in our society began to increase, there
    has been concern about the effects of divorce on the children,"
    said lead author Maria Boccia, Ph.D., professor of child and family
    studies at Baylor University in the Robbins College of Health and Human Sciences. "Most research has focused on short-term effects, like academic performance, or longer-term outcomes like the impact on relationships. How divorce causes these effects, however, is unknown.

    "Oxytocin is a neurohormone that is important in regulating these
    behaviors and is also sensitive to the impact of stressful life events
    in early life," she said. "This is a first step towards understanding
    what mechanisms might be involved." Previous studies of children whose
    parents were divorced have found that the experience was associated with
    mood disorders and substance abuse -- behaviors found to be related
    to oxytocin, Boccia said. Additionally, such childhood experiences as
    divorce or death of a parent are associated with depression and anxiety
    in adolescents and adults, as well as with poorer parenting in adulthood,
    less parental sensitivity and warmth, overreaction and increased use
    of punishment.



    ========================================================================== Researchers in the Baylor study examined the effect of the experience of parental divorce in childhood on later adult oxytocin levels. They also
    asked participants to complete a set of questionnaires on attachment
    style and other measures.

    "What we found was that oxytocin was substantially lower in people who experienced parental divorce compared to those who did not and correlated
    with responses on several measures of attachment," Boccia said. "These
    results suggest that oxytocin levels are adversely affected by parental
    divorce and may be related to other effects that have been documented
    in people who experience parental divorce." Animal studies also suggest
    that one mechanism contributing to the negative effects of early parental separation may be suppression of oxytocin activity.

    For the latest study, researchers recruited 128 individuals ages 18 to 62
    at two institutions of higher learning in the Southeast United States. Of those, 27.3% indicated their parents were divorced. The average age for participants when their parents divorced was 9 years.

    Upon arriving at the study site, participants were asked to empty their bladders, then given a 16-ounce bottle of water to drink before filling
    out questionnaires about their parents and peers during childhood,
    as well as their current social functioning. The questions addressed
    their parents' style, including affection, protection, indifference, over-control and abuse; and their own levels of confidence, discomfort
    with closeness, need for approval and their styles of relationships
    and caregiving.

    After participants completed the questionnaires, urine samples were
    collected, and researchers analyzed oxytocin concentrations. The levels
    were substantially lower in individuals whose childhood experience
    included their parents' divorce.

    Further analysis showed that those individuals rated their parents
    as less caring and more indifferent. They also rated their fathers as
    more abusive.

    Those who experienced parental divorce during childhood were less
    confident, more uncomfortable with closeness and less secure in
    relationships. They rated their own caregiving style as less sensitive
    and close than did the participants whose parents had not divorced.

    "One of the first questions I am asked when presenting this research to
    other scientists is 'does how old the child is when the divorce occurs
    matter?' That is the most pressing question that we need to explore,"
    Boccia said.

    *This study was supported with a grant from the National Institutes
    of Health.

    Co-researchers included Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in Charlotte,
    N.C., and the departments of surgery and psychiatry at the University
    of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Baylor_University. Note: Content
    may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Maria L. Boccia, Christopher Cook, Lesley Marson, Cort
    Pedersen. Parental
    divorce in childhood is related to lower urinary oxytocin
    concentrations in adulthood.. Journal of Comparative Psychology,
    2020; DOI: 10.1037/ com0000248 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/09/200909100230.htm

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