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Original Contribution
JAMA. 1966;197(3):191-199. doi: 10.1001/jama.1966.03110030085031

Maternal and Other Factors in the Etiology of Infantile Colic

Report of a Prospective Study of 146 Infants

  1. Jack L. Paradise, MD
  1. From the Department of Pediatrics, Bellaire (Ohio) Clinic.

Abstract

Significant colic developed in 23% of 146 normal newborns. Its incidence was unrelated to family economic class, maternal age, birth order, sex, weight gain, type of feeding, or family history of allergic or gastrointestinal disorder. Superior maternal intelligence and advanced maternal education seemed associated with a higher than average incidence of colic, possibly because of better maternal reporting or lower maternal tolerance. The occurrence of colic showed no relationship to maternal emotional factors, whether estimated clinically or measured by a standardized psychological test. Most mothers of infants with colic were stable, cheerful, and feminine. This evidence, and other evidence when critically reviewed, does not support the frequently stated view that colic results from an unfavorable emotional climate created by an inexperienced, anxious, hostile, or unmotherly mother. By so advising parents, physicians may relieve them of unwarranted self-blame and anxiety.

Footnotes

  • Read in part before the Section on Child Development during the 34th annual meeting of the American Academy of Pediatrics, Chicago, Oct 24, 1965.

  • Reprint requests to 4211 Noble St, Bellaire, Ohio 43906 (Dr. Paradise).

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