Grantham-McGregor, SallySchifield, W.Haggard, D.2023-11-012023-11-011989CERIS - 530:11https://hdl.handle.net/2139/56128Jamaican children who had recovered from severe malnutrition 3 years previously (CM group) were observed with their mothers in a structured play situation. Their behaviour was compared with two other groups; another severely malnourished group which has participated in an intervention programme of psycho-social stimulation (IM group) and an adequately nourished group (controls). All children were subjects in a longitudinal intervention study (Grantham-McGregor, Schofield & Powell, 1987). Both malnourished group’s DQ remained low but the IM group caught up to the controls. During the observation the CM children stayed nearer their mothers and played less than the children in other groups. It was hypothesized that this behaviour could have contributed to their poor development. The IM children behaved similarly to the controls. It is probable that non-nutritional intervention had changed their behaviour. Only little differences were found between the mothers.en-USsevere malnutritionmaternal interactionpsycho-social stimulationJamaican childrenMaternal-child interaction in survivors or severe malnutrition who received psychosocial stimulationOther