Substance AbuseTemperament and behavior of infants prenatally exposed to drugs: clinical
implications for the mother-infant dyad.
Rebecca Edmondson & Tina M. Smith (IMHJ 1994, Vol. 15, No. 4
Winter, pp. 368-379)
University of North Carolina Chapel HillNeurobiology of prenatal cocaine exposure effect on developing
Monoamine systems
Linda C. Mayes (IMHJ 1994, Vol. 15, No. 2 Summer, pp. 121-133)
Yale Child Study CenterNeurobiological consequences of prenatal stimulant drug exposure
Suzanne D. Dixon (IMHJ 1994, Vol. 15, No. 2 Summer, pp. 134-145)
University of California, San DiegoIssues in prenatal cocaine use research: problems in identifying users and
choosing an appropriate comparison group.
Marylou Behnke & Fonda Davis Eyler (IMHJ 1994, Vol. 15, No. 2
Summer, pp. 146-157)
University of FloridaEffects of prenatal exposure to cocaine in early infancy: Toxic effects on
the process of mutual regulation.
Marjorie Beeghly & Edward Z. Tronick (IMHJ 1994, Vol. 15, No. 2
Summer, pp. 158-175)
Children's Hospital BostonIn utero drug exposure and maternal-infant interaction: The complexities
of the dyad and their environment
Kiti Freier (IMHJ 1994, Vol. 15, No. 2 Summer, pp. 176-188)
Women & Infants' Hospital, ProvidenceSpontaneous play in two-year-olds born to substance abusing mothers
Leila Beckwith, Carol Rodning, Deborah Norris, Leslie Phillipsen,
Pegah Khandabi, and Judy Howard. (IMHJ 1994, Vol. 15, No. 2
Summer, pp. 189-201)
UCLA School of MedicineClinical issues related to substance-involved mothers and their infants
Carol Seval Brooks, Barry Zuckerman, Amy Bamforth, Jean Cole,
and Margot Kaplan-Sanoff
(IMHJ 1994, Vol. 15, No. 2 Summer, pp. 202-217)Punitive legal approaches to the problem of prenatal drug exposure
Frances Elizabeth Garrity-Rokous
(IMHJ 1994, Vol. 15, No. 2 Summer, pp. 218-234)
Yale University