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Infant cognitive home environment as a moderator for the association of prenatal lead on child language
Wylie, A. C., Willoughby, M. T., Fry, R. C., Mills-Koonce, W. R., Short, S. J., & Propper, C. B. (2025). Infant cognitive home environment as a moderator for the association of prenatal lead on child language. NeuroToxicology, 108, 306-317. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuro.2025.04.010
Exposure to lead during early life, including in pregnancy, is toxic to neurodevelopment. Though public health initiatives have resulted in an overall reduction in lead exposure levels, lead remains a significant environmental hazard, requiring innovative efforts to mitigate the burden of early life lead. This study explored whether positive postnatal social experiences in the forms of positive caregiving and a rich cognitive home environment moderate the associations of prenatal lead on child neurodevelopmental outcomes including language skills, effortful control, and executive function skills. We leverage an analytic sample (N = 107) drawn from a prospective cohort of mother-infant dyads. Prenatal lead was measured from maternal urine, positive caregiving from observational methods, and cognitive home environment from a validated questionnaire. Results reveal a negative association of prenatal lead on child language when the cognitive home environment in infancy was poor (beta=-0.32, p = 0.04) but not when the cognitive home environment in infancy was rich (beta=0.20, p = 0.16). This buffering effect was not observed for the child outcomes of effortful control or executive function skills. Our results encourage future research into the provision of a rich cognitive home environment as a means of mitigating the detrimental effects of prenatal lead exposure on early child language skills.
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