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'''Attachment disorder''' is a broad term intended to describe ]s of ], ], and ]ships arising from unavailability of normal socializing care and attention from ] in early ]. Such a failure would result from unusual early experiences of ], ], abrupt separation from caregivers between three months and three years of age, frequent change or excessive numbers of caregivers, or lack of caregiver responsiveness to child communicative efforts resulting in a lack of basic ].<ref>Fonagy, Peter. ''Attachment Theory and Psychoanalysis''. Other Professional, 2010. Print.</ref> A problematic history of social relationships occurring after about age three may be distressing to a child, but does not result in attachment disorder. | |||
'''Attachment disorder''' is based on the ] theories that | |||
# normal mother-child attachment forms in the first two years of life; and | |||
# if a normal attachment is not formed during the first two to three years, attachment can be induced later. | |||
This theory is used, for example, to explain the behavioral difficulties of adopted children. | |||
==''Attachment'' and ''attachment disorder''== | |||
Attachment theory was developed by ] in the 1940s and 1950s and is the leading theory used in the fields of ], ], and related fields. It is a well researched theory that describes how the attachment relationship develops, why it is crucual to later healthy development, and what are the effects of early maltreatment or other disruptions in this process. | |||
{{main | Attachment theory | Attachment in children}} | |||
] is primarily an ] and ]. In relation to infants, it primarily consists of ''proximity seeking'' to an ''attachment figure'' in the face of threat, for the purpose of survival.<ref>Bowlby (1970) p 181</ref> Although an attachment is a "tie", it is not synonymous with love and affection, despite their often going together; a healthy attachment is considered an important foundation of all subsequent relationships. Infants become attached to adults who are sensitive and responsive in ]s with the infant, and who remain consistent caregivers for some time. Parental responses lead to the development of patterns of attachment which in turn lead to "internal working models" that guide one's feelings, thoughts, and expectations in later relationships.<ref>Bretherton & Munholland (1999) p 89</ref> | |||
A fundamental aspect of attachment is called ''basic trust''. Basic trust is a broader concept than attachment in that it extends beyond the infant-caregiver relationship to "the wider social network of trustable and caring others"<ref name="Newman">Newman, Barbara M., and Philip R. Newman. ''Development through Life: A Psychosocial Approach''. 12th ed. Stamford: Cengage Learning, 2015. 177. Print. {{ISBN|9781285459967}}</ref> and "links confidence about the past with faith about the future".<ref name="Newman" /> ] argues that the sense of trust in oneself and others is the foundation of human development"<ref>Kail, Robert V., and John C. Cavanaugh. ''Human Development: A Life-span View''. 5th ed. Australia: Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2010. 168. Print.</ref> and with a balance of mistrust produces ]. | |||
Attachment therapy is a broad term that covers a multitude of interventions. It is a term that has lost utility since it is used to cover so many interventions. Reputable approaches to treatment based on theory and research evidence include Theraplay, ]. However, the use of coercive interventions has no basis in theory and is not supported by any reputable professional organization, including The Association for The Treatment and Training in the Attachment of Children, APSAC, APA, NASW, or AMA. Neither Theraplay nor Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy use coercive interventions and are in full compliance with the above referenced standards. | |||
In the ] sense, a ] is a condition requiring treatment as opposed to risk factors for subsequent disorders.<ref>AACAP 2005, p1208</ref> There is a lack of consensus about the precise meaning of the term "attachment disorder", but there is general agreement that such disorders arise only after early adverse caregiving experiences. ] indicates the absence of either or both the main aspects of ''proximity seeking'' to an identified ''attachment figure''. This can occur in institutions, with repeated changes of caregiver, or from extremely neglectful primary caregivers who show persistent disregard for a child's basic attachment needs after the age of 6 months. Current official classifications of ] under ] and ] are largely based on this understanding of the nature of attachment. | |||
==Signs of attachment problems== | |||
Attachment is fundamental to healthy development, normal personality, and the capacity to form healthy and authentic emotional relationships. How can you determine whether your child has attachment issues that require attention? What is normal behavior, and what are the signs of attachment issues? If you’ve adopted an infant, will you see attachment problems develop? These and other related questions are often at the forefront of adoptive parents’ minds. In this article I will help you understand what to look for and how to identify concerns. | |||
The words '']'' or ''pattern'' refer to the various types of attachment arising from early care experiences, called ''secure'', ''anxious-ambivalent'', ''anxious-avoidant'', (all organized), and ''disorganized''. Some of these styles are more problematic than others, and, although they are not disorders in the clinical sense, are sometimes discussed under the term 'attachment disorder'. | |||
Attachment is the base of emotional health, social relationships, and one's worldview. The ability to trust and form reciprocal relationships affected the emotional health, security, and safety of the child, as well as the child's development and future inter-personal relationships. The ability to regulate emotions, have a conscience, and experience empathy all require secure attachment. Healthy brain development is built on a secure attachment relationship. | |||
Discussion of the disorganized attachment style sometimes includes it under the rubric of attachment disorders because disorganized attachment is seen as the beginning of a developmental trajectory that takes a person ever further from the normal range, culminating in actual disorders of thought, behavior, or mood.<ref>Levy K.N. et al. (2005)</ref> Early intervention for disorganized attachment, or other problematic styles, is directed toward changing the trajectory of development to provide a better outcome later in life. | |||
Children who are adopted after the age of six months are at risk for attachment problems. Normal attachment develops during the child's first two to three years of life. Problems with the mother-child relationship during that time, orphanage experience, or breaks in the consistent caregiver-child relationship interfere with the normal development of a healthy and secure attachment. There are wide ranges of attachment difficulties that result in varying degrees of emotional disturbance in the child. One thing is certain; if an infant's needs are not met consistently, in a loving, nurturing way, attachment will not occur normally and this underlying problem will manifest itself in a variety of symptoms. | |||
] and colleagues proposed an alternative set of ] (see below) of three categories of attachment disorder, namely "no discriminated attachment figure", "secure base distortions" and "disrupted attachment disorder". These classifications consider a disorder a variation that requires treatment rather than an individual difference within the normal range.<ref>Prior & Glaser (2006) p 223</ref> | |||
When the first-year-of-life attachment-cycle is undermined and the child’s needs are not met, and normal socializing shame is not resolved, mistrust begins to define the perspective of the child and attachment problems result. The cycle can become undermined or broken for many reasons: | |||
==Boris and Zeanah's typology== | |||
Multiple disruptions in care giving | |||
Many leading attachment theorists, such as ] and Leiberman, have recognized the limitations of the DSM-IV-TR and ICD-10 criteria and proposed broader diagnostic criteria. There is as yet no official consensus on these criteria. The APSAC Taskforce recognised in its recommendations that "attachment problems extending beyond RAD, are a real and appropriate concern for professionals working with children", and set out recommendations for assessment.<ref>Chaffin (2006) p 86</ref> | |||
Post-partum depression causing an emotionally unavailable mother | |||
Hospitalization of the child causing separation from the parent and/or unrelieved pain. For example, stays in a NICU or repeated hospitalizations during infancy. | |||
Parents who are attachment disordered, leading to neglect, abuse (physical/sexual/verbal), or inappropriate parental responses not leading to a secure/predictable relationship | |||
Genetic factors. | |||
Pervasive developmental disorders | |||
Caregivers whose own needs are not met, leading to overload and lack of awareness of the infants needs | |||
The child may develop mistrust, impeding effective attachment behavior. The developmental stages following these first three years continue to be distorted and/or retarded, and common symptoms emerge. Although I am listing several common symptoms it is very important to realize that when you are trying to parent a child with attachment difficulties you must focus on the cause of the behaviors and not on the symptoms or surface behaviors. It is the cause or motivation for the behaviors that must be your focus…otherwise you are like a doctor who treats a cough without figuring out whether the cough is caused by TB, an allergy, the flu, or lung cancer. | |||
Boris and Zeanah (1999),<ref>Boris & Zeannah (1999)</ref> have offered an approach to attachment disorders that considers cases where children have had no opportunity to form an attachment, those where there is a distorted relationship, and those where an existing attachment has been abruptly disrupted. This would significantly extend the definition beyond the ICD-10 and DSM-IV-TR definitions because those definitions are limited to situations where the child has no attachment or no attachment to a ''specified'' attachment figure. | |||
Superficially engaging and charming behavior, phoniness | |||
Avoidance of eye contact. | |||
Indiscriminate affection with strangers. | |||
Lack of affection on parental terms. | |||
Destructiveness to self, others, and material things. | |||
Cruelty to animals. | |||
Crazy lying (lying in the face of the obvious) | |||
Poor impulse control. | |||
Learning lags. | |||
Lack of cause/effect thinking. | |||
Lack of conscience. | |||
Abnormal eating patterns. | |||
Poor peer relationships. | |||
Preoccupation with fire and/or gore. | |||
Persistent nonsense questions and chatter indicating a need to control. | |||
Inappropriate clinginess and demandingness. | |||
Abnormal speech patterns. | |||
Inappropriate sexuality. | |||
Boris and Zeanah use the term "disorder of attachment" to indicate a situation in which a young child has no preferred adult caregiver. Such children may be indiscriminately sociable and approach all adults, whether familiar or not; alternatively, they may be emotionally withdrawn and fail to seek comfort from anyone. This type of attachment problem is parallel to reactive attachment disorder as defined in DSM and ICD in its inhibited and disinhibited forms as described above. | |||
==Causes== | |||
What are the underlying causes of these various symptoms? The cause is some break in the early attachment relationship that results in difficulties trusting others. The child experiences a fear of close authentic emotional relationships because early maltreatment or other difficulties has "taught" the child that adults are not trust worthy and that the child is unloved and unlovable. Fundamentally, the cause is a developmental delay. The child may be chronologically six, ten, or fifteen, but developmentally these children are much younger. It is often useful to consider, "at what age would this behavior be normal?" Frequently you will find that the child’s behavior would be normal for a toddler. | |||
Boris and Zeanah also describe a condition they term "secure base distortion". In this situation, the child has a preferred familiar caregiver, but the relationship is such that the child cannot use the adult for safety while gradually exploring the environment. Such children may endanger themselves, may cling to the adult, may be excessively compliant, or may show role reversals in which they care for or punish the adult. | |||
Chronic Maltreatment (abuse or neglect) or other disruptions to the normal attachment relationship cause: | |||
The third type of disorder discussed by Boris and Zeanah is termed "disrupted attachment". This type of problem, which is not covered under other approaches to disordered attachment, results from an abrupt separation or loss of a familiar caregiver to whom attachment has developed. The young child's reaction to such a loss is parallel to the grief reaction of an older person, with progressive changes from protest (crying and searching) to despair, sadness, and withdrawal from communication or play, and finally detachment from the original relationship and recovery of social and play activities. | |||
*Fear of intimacy | |||
*Overwhelming feelings of shame. (Not guilt…shame causes you to want to hide and not be seen. So, for example, some children’s chronic lying can be seen as a manifestation of this pervasive sense of shame. After all, what is a lie, but another way to hide?). | |||
*Chronic feelings of being unloved | |||
*Chronic feelings of being unlovable | |||
*A distorted view of self, other, and relationships based on past maltreatment. | |||
*Lack of trust | |||
*Feeling that nothing the child does can make a difference; hence, low motivation and poor academic performance. | |||
*A core sense of being Bad. | |||
*Difficulty asking for help | |||
*Difficulty relying on others in a cooperative and collaborative manner. | |||
Most recently, ] and Erica Willheim have shown a relationship between maternal violence-related ] and secure base distortion (see above) which is characterized by child recklessness, separation anxiety, hypervigilance, and role-reversal.<ref>Schechter DS, Willheim E (2009). Disturbances of attachment and parental psychopathology in early childhood. Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health Issue. Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Clinics of North America, 18(3), 665-687.</ref> | |||
So how does one distinguish the difference between a child who "looks" attached and a child who really is making a healthy, secure attachment? This question becomes important for adoptive families because some adopted children will form an almost immediate dependency bond to their adoptive parents. To mistake this as secure and healthy attachment can lead to many problems down the road. Just because a child calls someone Mom or "Dad," snuggles, cuddles, and says, I love you," does not mean that the child is attached or even attaching. Saying, "I love you", and knowing what that really feels like, can be two different things. Attachment is a process. It takes time. The key to its formation is trust, and trust becomes secure only after repeated testing. Generally attachment develops during the first two to three years of life. The child learns that he or she is loved and can love in return. The parents give love and learn that the child loves them. The child learns to trust that his needs will be met in a consistent and nurturing manner. The child learns that he "belongs" to his family and they to him. It is through these elements that a child learns how to love, and how to accept love. | |||
==Problems of attachment style== | |||
Older adopted children need time to make adjustments to their new surroundings. They need to become familiar with their caregivers, friends, relatives, neighbors, teachers, and others with whom they will have repeated contact. They need to learn the ins and outs of new household routines and adapt to living in a new physical environment. Some children have cultural or language hurdles to overcome. Until most of these tasks have been accomplished, they may not be able to relax enough to allow the work of attachment to begin. In the meantime, behavioral problems related to insecurity and lack of attachment, as well as to other events in the child's past, may start to surface. Some start to get labels, like "manipulative," "superficial," or "sneaky". On the inside, this child is filled with anxiety, fear, grief, loss, and often a profound sense of being bad, defective, and unlovable. The child has not developed the self-esteem that comes with feeling like a valued, contributing, member of a family. The child cares little about pleasing others since his relationships with them are quite superficial. | |||
{{main|Attachment theory | Attachment in children}} | |||
The majority of 1-year-old children can tolerate brief separations from familiar caregivers and are quickly comforted when the caregivers return. These children also use familiar people as a "secure base" and return to them periodically when exploring a new situation. Such children are said to have a secure attachment style, and characteristically continue to develop well both cognitively and emotionally. | |||
Smaller numbers of children show less positive development at age 12 months. Their less desirable attachment styles may be predictors of poor later social development. Although these children's behavior at 12 months is not a serious problem, they appear to be on developmental trajectories that will end in poor social skills and relationships. Because attachment styles may serve as predictors of later development, it may be appropriate to think of certain attachment styles as part of the range of attachment disorders. | |||
When are problems first apparent? Children who have experienced physical or sexual abuse, physical or psychological neglect, or orphanage life will begin to show difficulties as young as six-months of age. For example, the signs of difficulties for an infant include the following: | |||
Insecure attachment styles in toddlers involve unusual reunions after separation from a familiar person. The children may snub the returning caregiver, or may go to the person but then resist being picked up. They may reunite with the caregiver, but then persistently cling to the caregiver, and fail to return to their previous play. These children are more likely to have later social problems with peers and teachers, but some of them spontaneously develop better ways of interacting with other people. | |||
*Weak crying response or rageful and/or constant whining; inability to be comforted | |||
*Tactile defensiveness | |||
*Poor clinging and extreme resistance to cuddling: seems stiff as a board | |||
*Poor sucking response | |||
*Poor eye contact, lack of tracking | |||
*No reciprocal smile response | |||
*Indifference to others | |||
*Failure to respond with recognition to parents. | |||
*Delayed physical motor skill development milestones (creeping, crawling, sitting, etc.) | |||
*Flaccid | |||
A small group of toddlers show a distressing way of reuniting after a separation. Called a disorganized/disoriented style, this reunion pattern can involve looking dazed or frightened, freezing in place, backing toward the caregiver or approaching with head sharply averted, or showing other behaviors that seem to imply fearfulness of the person who is being sought.<ref>Mercer, J (2006) p 107</ref> Disorganized attachment has been considered a major risk factor for child psychopathology, as it appears to interfere with regulation or tolerance of negative emotions and may thus foster aggressive behavior.<ref>VanIJzendoorn & Bakermans-Kranenburg (2003)</ref> Disorganized patterns of attachment have the strongest links to concurrent and subsequent psychopathology, and considerable research has demonstrated both within-the-child and environmental correlates of disorganized attachment.<ref name = zeanah2003>Zeanah et al. (2003)</ref> | |||
==Subtle signs of attachment problems== | |||
Gail tells her seven-year-old daughter, Sally, to pick up the napkin Sally has dropped. As Sally crosses her arms a sad and angry pout darkens her face. Gail says, "Sally, I told you to pick up the napkin and throw it away." Sally stomps over to the napkin, picks it up, and throws it away. Crying and whining, Sally stands with her back to Gail. Sally, angry and unhappy, is exhibiting one of the subtle signs of attachment sensitivity that nearly all children adopted after six-months demonstrate. Attachment is an interpersonal, interactive process that results in a child feeling safe, secure, and able to develop healthy, emotionally meaningful relationships. The process requires a sensitive, responsive parent who is capable of emotional engagement and participation in contingent collaborative communication (responsive communication) at nonverbal and verbal levels. The parent’s ability to respond to the child’s emotional state is what will prevent attachment sensitivities from becoming problems of a more severe nature. | |||
==Possible mechanisms== | |||
What are the subtle signs of attachment issues? | |||
One study has reported a connection between a specific ] and disorganized attachment (not RAD) associated with problems of parenting.<ref name= "Van Ijzendoorn & Bakermans-Kranenburg (2004)">{{cite journal |vauthors=Van Ijzendoorn MH, Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ |title=DRD4 7-repeat polymorphism moderates the association between maternal unresolved loss or trauma and infant disorganization |journal=Attach Hum Dev |volume=8 |issue=4 |pages=291–307 |year=2006 |pmid=17178609 |doi=10.1080/14616730601048159 |s2cid=27646011 }}</ref> Another author has compared atypical social behavior in genetic conditions such as ] with behaviors symptomatic of RAD.<ref name ="Zeanah 2007">Zeanah CH (2007). "Reactive Attachment Disorder". In Narrow WE, First MB ''et al.'' (Eds.) ''Gender and age consideration in psychiatric diagnosis.'' Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association. {{ISBN|0-89042-295-8}}. | |||
# Sensitivity to rejection and to disruptions in the normally attuned connection between mother and child. | |||
</ref> | |||
# Avoiding comfort when the child’s feelings are hurt, although the child will turn to the parent for comfort when physically hurt. | |||
# Difficulty discussing angry feelings or hurt feelings. | |||
# Over valuing looks, appearances, and clothes. | |||
# Sleep disturbances. Not wanting to sleep alone. | |||
# Precocious independence. A level of independence that is more frequently seen in slightly older children. | |||
# Reticence and anxiety about changes. | |||
# Picking at scabs and sores. | |||
# Secretiveness | |||
# Difficulty tolerating correction or criticism. | |||
Typical attachment development begins with unlearned infant reactions to social signals from caregivers. The ability to send and receive social communications through facial expressions, gestures and voice develops with social experience by seven to nine months. This makes it possible for an infant to interpret messages of calm or alarm from face or voice. At about eight months, infants typically begin to respond with fear to unfamiliar or startling situations, and to look to the faces of familiar caregivers for information that either justifies or soothes their fear. This developmental combination of social skills and the emergence of fear reactions results in attachment behavior such as proximity-seeking, if a familiar, sensitive, responsive, and cooperative adult is available. Further developments in attachment, such as negotiation of separation in the toddler and preschool period, depend on factors such as the caregiver's interaction style and ability to understand the child's emotional communications.<ref name="Dozier ''et al.'' (2001)">{{cite journal |vauthors=Dozier M, Stovall KC, Albus KE, Bates B |title=Attachment for infants in foster care: the role of caregiver state of mind |journal=Child Dev |volume=72 |issue=5 |pages=1467–77 |year=2001 |pmid=11699682 |doi=10.1111/1467-8624.00360}}</ref> | |||
Internationally adopted children experience at least two significant changes during the first few months of life that can have a profound impact on later development and security. Birth mother to orphanage or foster care and then orphanage to adoptive home are two transitions. We know from extensive research that prenatal, post-natal, and subsequent experiences create lasting impressions on a child. During the first few minutes, days, and weeks of life, the infant clearly recognizes the birth mother’s voice, smell, and taste. Changes in caregivers are disruptive. The new caregivers look different, smell different, sound different, taste different. In the orphanage there are often many care givers but no one special caregiver. Adoption brings with it a whole new, strange, and initially frightening world. These moves and disruptions have profound effects on a child's emotional, interpersonal, cognitive, and behavioral development. The longer a child is in alternate care, the more these subtle signs become pervasive. | |||
With insensitive or unresponsive caregivers, or frequent changes, an infant may have few experiences that encourage proximity seeking to a familiar person. An infant who experiences fear but who cannot find comforting information in an adult's face and voice may develop atypical ways of coping with fearfulness such as the maintenance of distance from adults, or the seeking of proximity to all adults. These symptoms accord with the DSM criteria for reactive attachment disorder.<ref>] ] 1994</ref> Either of these behavior patterns may create a developmental trajectory leading ever farther from typical attachment processes such as the development of an internal working model of social relationships that facilitates both the giving and the receiving of care from others.<ref name="Mercer, Sarner, & Rosa 2003">Mercer J, Sarner L and Rosa L (2003) ''Attachment Therapy on Trial: The Torture and Death of Candace Newmaker.'' Westport, CT: Praeger {{ISBN|0-275-97675-0}}, pp. 98–103.</ref><ref>Mercer (2006), pp. 64–70.</ref> | |||
There are effective ways for a parent to help his or her child. Parents and the right parenting are vital to preventing subtle signs from becoming anything more than sensitivities. Parenting consistently with clear and firm limits is essential. Discipline should be enforced with an attitude of sensitive and responsive empathy, acceptance, curiosity, love, and playfulness. This provides the most healing and protective way to correct a child. | |||
Atypical development of fearfulness, with a constitutional tendency either to excessive or inadequate fear reactions, might be necessary before an infant is vulnerable to the effects of poor attachment experiences.<ref name="Marshall & Fox (2005)">{{cite journal |last=Marshall |first=P.J. |author2=Fox, N.A. |year=2005 |title=Relationship between behavioral reactivity at 4 months and attachment classification at 14 months in a selected sample |journal=Infant Behavior and Development |volume=28 |issue= 4|pages=492–502 |doi=10.1016/j.infbeh.2005.06.002 }}</ref> | |||
As Sally walks away to pout, Gail comes up behind her, scoops her up, and begins rocking her gently while crooning in Sally's ear. Gail sings songs and tells Sally she loves her and understands Sally is angry at being told what to do. Gail expresses sadness that Sally is so unhappy. At first Sally resists a bit, but she soon calms down and listens as Gail tells her how much she loves Sally. Sally is sensitive to feelings of rejection and abandonment that are evoked by her mother’s displeasure, so Gail brings Sally closer to reassure Sally nonverbally. It is by experience that the subtle signs are addressed and managed. Nonverbal experience is much more powerful than verbal experience since most of the subtle signs have their origin in nonverbal experience and nonverbal memory. Finally, Sally eventually did what she was asked to do and praised for doing what was expected. In this manner, Sally experiences acceptance of who she is while becoming socialized. | |||
Alternatively, the two variations of RAD may develop from the same inability to develop "stranger-wariness" due to inadequate care. Appropriate fear responses may only be able to develop after an infant has first begun to form a selective attachment. An infant who is not in a position to do this cannot afford not to show interest in any person as they may be potential attachment figures. Faced with a swift succession of carers the child may have no opportunity to form a selective attachment until the possible biologically determined sensitive period for developing stranger-wariness has passed. It is thought this process may lead to the disinhibited form.<ref name="Prior and Glaser p">Prior and Glaser p.</ref> | |||
These sensitivities do not constitute a mental illness or Reactive Attachment Disorder. They are subtle signs of attachment sensitivities. So, what can you do? | |||
In the inhibited form infants behave as if their attachment system has been "switched off". However the innate capacity for attachment behavior cannot be lost. This may explain why children diagnosed with the inhibited form of RAD from institutions almost invariably go on to show formation of attachment behavior to good carers. However children with the inhibited form as a consequence of neglect and frequent changes of caregiver continue to show the inhibited form for far longer when placed in families.<ref name="Prior and Glaser p" /> | |||
First, the most important thing you can do is maintain an attuned emotionally close and positive relationship with your child even when your child is being nasty or pushing your buttons…it is at those times that the child most needs to feel loved and loveable, even if the behavior is unacceptable. First, create a connection with your child and then discipline. | |||
Additionally, the development of ] ''may'' play a role in emotional development. Theory of Mind is the ability to know that the experience of knowledge and intention lies behind human actions such as facial expressions. Although it is reported that very young infants have different responses to humans than to non-human objects, Theory of Mind develops relatively gradually and possibly results from predictable interactions with adults. However, some ability of this kind must be in place before mutual communication through gaze or other gesture can occur, as it does by seven to nine months. Some neurodevelopmental disorders, such as ], have been attributed to the absence of the mental functions that underlie Theory of Mind. It is possible that the congenital absence of this ability, or the lack of experiences with caregivers who communicate in a predictable fashion, could underlie the development of reactive attachment disorder.<ref>Mercer (2006) p.</ref><ref name="Fonagy ''et al.'' (2002)">Fonagy P, Gergely G, Jurist EL, Target M (2006). ''Affect Regulation, Mentalization, and the Development of Self.'' Other Press (NY) {{ISBN|1-892746-34-4}}</ref> | |||
Second, bringing the child in close is better than allowing the child to be alone or isolate him or her self. | |||
==Diagnosis== | |||
Third, talk for the child. Put words to what the child is feeling. This allows the child to feel understood by you, maintains a connection, and helps assuage the fear of rejection and abandonment. It also helps the child become self-aware, models verbal behavior, and facilitates a sense of emotional attunement between parent and child. | |||
{{Main|Attachment measures}} | |||
Recognised assessment methods of attachment styles, difficulties or disorders include the ] (]),<ref>Ainsworth (1978),</ref><ref>Main & Solomon (1986), pp.95-124.</ref><ref>Main & Solomon (1990), pp. 121-160.</ref> the separation and reunion procedure and the Preschool Assessment of Attachment ("PAA"),<ref>Crittenden (1992)</ref> the Observational Record of the Caregiving Environment ("ORCE")<ref>](1996)</ref> and the ] ("AQ-sort").<ref>Waters and Deane (1985)</ref> | |||
More recent research also uses the ] or "DAI" developed by Smyke and Zeanah, (1999).<ref>Smyke and Zeanah (1999)</ref> This is a semi-structured interview designed to be administered by clinicians to caregivers. It covers 12 items, namely having a discriminated, preferred adult, seeking comfort when distressed, responding to comfort when offered, social and emotional reciprocity, emotional regulation, checking back after venturing away from the care giver, reticence with unfamiliar adults, willingness to go off with relative strangers, self endangering behavior, excessive clinging, vigilance/hypercompliance and role reversal. | |||
===Classification=== | |||
Fourth, don't make food a battle. A child who steals food or hoards food usually has sound emotional reasons for this. Providing the child with food so that your child experiences you as provider is often the solution. Put a bowl of fruit in the child’s room. (Be sure to keep if filled. It does not good if you provide and then leave an empty bowl!) In some instances, I’ve recommended that the parents provide the child with a fanny pack and keep it stocked with snacks. This usually quickly ends hoarding and stealing of food. | |||
{{main|Reactive attachment disorder}} | |||
] describes ], known as RAD, and Disinhibited Disorder of Childhood, less well known as ]. ] also describes Reactive Attachment Disorder of Infancy or Early Childhood. It divides this into two subtypes, Inhibited Type and Disinhibited Type, both known as RAD. The two classifications are similar and both include: | |||
Fifth, for the child who is overly independent, doing for the child and not encouraging precocious independence is helpful. So, making a game of brushing your six-year old’s teeth, dressing your seven-year-old, or playing at feeding a nine-year-old, are all ways to demonstrate that you will care for the child. Keeping it playful and light, allows the child to experience what the child needs and helps eliminate hurtful battles. | |||
*markedly disturbed and developmentally inappropriate social relatedness in most contexts, | |||
*the disturbance is not accounted for solely by developmental delay and does not meet the criteria for ], | |||
*onset before 5 years of age, | |||
*requires a history of significant neglect, and | |||
*implicit lack of identifiable, preferred attachment figure. | |||
ICD-10 includes in its diagnosis psychological and physical ] and injury in addition to neglect. This is somewhat controversial, being a ''commission'' rather than ''omission'' and because abuse in and of itself does not lead to attachment disorder . | |||
The inhibited form is described as "a failure to initiate or respond ... to most social interactions, as manifest by excessively inhibited responses" and such infants do not seek and accept comfort at times of threat, alarm or distress, thus failing to maintain 'proximity', an essential element of attachment behavior. The disinhibited form shows "indiscriminate sociability ... excessive familiarity with relative strangers" (DSM-IV-TR) and therefore a lack of 'specificity', the second basic element of attachment behavior. The ICD-10 descriptions are comparable. 'Disinhibited' and 'inhibited' are not opposites in terms of attachment disorder and can co-exist in the same child. The inhibited form has a greater tendency to ameliorate with an appropriate caregiver whilst the disinhibited form is more enduring.<ref>Prior & Glaser 2006, p. 220-221.</ref> | |||
Sixth, Time-In rather than Time-out. When your child is becoming dysregulated, they need you to regulate their emotions. You do that by reflecting the child’s emotions back to the child; putting into words what you think the child may be feeling. In this manner you demonstrate that you can accept what the child is feeling, that feelings can be tolerated and discussed; even if the behavior will be disciplined at a later time. Remember; first connect with you child, then discipline. | |||
While RAD is likely to occur following neglectful and abusive childcare, there should be no automatic diagnosis on this basis alone as children can form stable attachments and social relationships despite marked abuse and neglect. Abuse can occur alongside the required factors but on its own does not explain attachment disorder. Experiences of abuse are associated with the development of disorganised attachment, in which the child prefers a familiar caregiver, but responds to that person in an unpredictable and somewhat bizarre way. Within official classifications, attachment disorganization is a risk factor but not in itself an attachment disorder. Further, although attachment disorders tend to occur in the context of some institutions, repeated changes of primary caregiver, or extremely neglectful identifiable primary caregivers who show persistent disregard for the child's basic attachment needs, not all children raised in these conditions develop an attachment disorder.<ref>Prior & Glaser (2006) p218-219</ref> | |||
Seventh, reduce shame. Avoid shaming parenting methods and interactions that might be harsh or punitive. If the child is already experiencing too much shame, increasing that will only be destructive to the child and your relationship with your child. You set the emotional tone for the relationship, so keeping things positive is important. So, as an example, your seven year old has just screamed at you, “I hate you,” because you said it’s time to go to bed. I’d start by reflecting the child’s feelings back to the child as you walk the child to bed with your arm around the child, "Boy, you are really mad that you have to go to bed now." "You sure don’t want to go to bed now. I wonder what you think is making me send you to bed now? … Maybe you just think I’m being mean?" Through this sort of dialogue you are demonstrating your acceptance of the child's feelings and your interest in the child's thinking and feeling…you are showing the child how to reflect on one’s inner life. The model suggested for parents is to create a healing PLACE (being Playful, Loving, Accepting, Curious, and Empathic). | |||
In conclusion, these subtle signs are important reminders that our children have ongoing sensitivities that as parents we must address. Responsive and sensitive communication is essential. Attachment is a function of reciprocal communication; attachment does not reside in the child alone. It is very important for the parent to manage and facilitate this attuned connection within a framework of clear limits and boundaries, natural consequences, and firm loving discipline. | |||
==Treatment== | ==Treatment== | ||
{{main|Attachment-based therapy (children)}} | |||
There are a variety of evidence based and effective prevention programs and treatment approaches for attachment disorder. ] is the basis for these and other treatment approaches. Several evidence-based and effective treatments are based on attachment theory including ] and ]. | |||
There are a variety of mainstream prevention programs and treatment approaches for attachment disorder, attachment problems and moods or behaviors considered to be potential problems within the context of ]. All such approaches for infants and younger children concentrate on increasing the responsiveness and sensitivity of the caregiver, or if that is not possible, changing the caregiver.<ref>Prior & Glaser (2006), p. 231.</ref><ref>AACAP (2005) p. 17-18.</ref><ref>BakermansKranenburg ''et al.'' (2003) A meta-analysis of early interventions.</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=O'Hara|first1=Leeanne|last2=Smith|first2=Emily R.|last3=Barlow|first3=Jane|last4=Livingstone|first4=Nuala|last5=Herath|first5=Nadeeja Ins|last6=Wei|first6=Yinghui|last7=Spreckelsen|first7=Thees Frerich|last8=Macdonald|first8=Geraldine|date=29 November 2019|title=Video feedback for parental sensitivity and attachment security in children under five years|journal=The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews|volume=2019|issue=11 |pages=CD012348|doi=10.1002/14651858.CD012348.pub2|issn=1469-493X|pmc=6883766|pmid=31782528}}</ref> Such approaches include 'Watch, wait and wonder,'<ref>Cohen ''et al.'' (1999)</ref> manipulation of sensitive responsiveness,<ref>van den Boom (1994)</ref><ref>van den Boom (1995)</ref> modified 'Interaction Guidance,'.<ref>Benoit ''et al.'' (2001)</ref> 'Preschool Parent Psychotherapy,'.<ref>Toth ''et al.'' (2002)</ref> Circle of Security',<ref>Marvin et al. (2002)</ref><ref>Cooper et al. (2005)</ref> Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-up (ABC),<ref name="Dozier et al. 2005">Dozier ''et al.'' (2005)</ref> the New Orleans Intervention,<ref>Larrieu & Zeanah (1998)</ref><ref>Larrieu & Zeannah (2004)</ref><ref>Zeannah & Smyke (2005)</ref> and Parent-Child psychotherapy.<ref>Leiberman ''et al.'' (2000), p. 432.</ref> Other known treatment methods include Developmental, Individual-difference, Relationship-based therapy (DIR) (also referred to as ''Floor Time'') by ], although DIR is primarily directed to treatment of ]<ref>Interdisciplinary Council on Developmental & Learning Disorders. (2007). {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080225132429/http://www.icdl.com/dirFloortime/overview/index.shtml |date=2008-02-25 }}.</ref> Some of these approaches, such as that suggested by Dozier, consider the attachment status of the adult caregiver to play an important role in the development of the emotional connection between adult and child. This includes foster parents, as children with poor attachment experiences often do not elicit appropriate caregiver responses from their attachment behaviors despite 'normative' care.<ref name="Dozier et al. 2005" /> | |||
<ref name="Arthur Becker-Weidman, Ph.D., & Deborah Shell, MA">Arthur Becker-Weidman & Deborah Shell, MA, Eds., (2005). Creating Capacity For Attachment, Wood N Barnes, Oklahoma City:OK </ref> | |||
<ref name="Becker-Weidman, 2006">Becker-Weidman, A., (2006). Treatment for Children with Trauma-Attachment Disorders: Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy, Child and Adolescent Social Work Journal. Vol. 13 #1, April 2006.</ref> | |||
Nearly all mainstream programs for the prevention and treatment of disorders of attachment ] use attachment theory. For example, the Circle of Security Program, (Dr. Robert Marvin, University of VA) is one such early intervention program with demonstrated effectiveness. Dr. Marvin and Dr. Siegel (University of California) both also endorse ] Other promising treatment methods remain under clinical investigation, for example, the Circle of Security Program of Dr. Robert Marvin at the University of Virginia, ''Developmental, Individual-difference, Relationship-based'' therapy (DIR or ''Floor Time'') by ]. | |||
Treatment for reactive attachment disorder for children usually involves a mix of therapy, counseling, and parenting education. These must be designed to make sure the child has a safe environment to live in and to develop positive interactions with caregivers and improves their relationships with their peers. | |||
] is an evidence-based ("Treatment for Children with Trauma-Attachment Disorders: Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy" Child and Adolescent Social Work Journal. 12(6), December 2005)treatment approach for the treatment of attachment disorder and reactive attachment disorder. Children who have experienced pervasive and extensive trauma, neglect, loss, and/or other dysregulating experiences can benefit from this treatment. Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy is based on principles derived from ] and Research; see the work of Bowlby. The treatment meets the standards of the American Professional Society on Child Abuse, The American Academy of Child Psychiatry, American Psychological Association, American Psychiatric Association, National Association of Social Workers, and various other groups' standards for the evaluation and treatment of children and adolescents. This is a non-coercive treatment. | |||
Medication can be used to treat similar conditions, like depression, anxiety, or hyperactivity, but there is no quick fix for reactive attachment disorder. A pediatrician may recommend a treatment plan, such as a mix of family therapy, individual psychological counseling, play therapy, special education services and parenting skills classes.<ref name="Types of treatment for reactive attachment disorder">{{cite web |url=http://helpguide.org/mental/parenting_bonding_reactive_attachment_disorder.htm |title=Attachment Disorders & Reactive Attachment Disorder: Symptoms, Treatment & Hope for Children with Insecure Attachment |access-date=2011-12-01 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111126145603/http://helpguide.org/mental/parenting_bonding_reactive_attachment_disorder.htm |archive-date=2011-11-26 }}, 'HelpGuide.org', 2011.</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==Pseudoscientific diagnoses and treatment== | |||
==References== | |||
{{main|Attachment therapy}} | |||
*Creating Capacity for Attachment, edited by Arthur Becker-Weidman, Ph.D., & Deborah Shell, MA, Wood 'N' Barnes, OK (2005). | |||
In the absence of officially recognized diagnostic criteria, and beyond the ambit of the discourse on a broader set of criteria discussed above, the term "attachment disorder" has been increasingly used by clinicians to refer to a broader set of children whose behavior may be affected by lack of a primary attachment figure, a seriously unhealthy attachment relationship with a primary caregiver, or a disrupted attachment relationship.<ref>Chaffin et al., (2006) p 81</ref> Although there are no studies examining diagnostic accuracy, concern is expressed as to the potential for over-diagnosis based on broad checklists and 'snapshots'.<ref>Chaffin et al. (2006) p 82</ref> This form of ], including diagnosis and accompanying parenting techniques, is scientifically unvalidated and is not considered part of mainstream psychology or, despite its name, to be based on ], with which it is considered incompatible.<ref name="O'Connor (2003)">{{Cite journal |vauthors=O'Connor TG, Zeanah CH |title=Attachment disorders: assessment strategies and treatment approaches |journal=Attach Hum Dev |volume=5 |issue=3 |pages=223–44 |year=2003 |pmid=12944216 |doi=10.1080/14616730310001593974 |s2cid=21547653 }}</ref><ref name="Ziv">{{Cite book|author=Ziv Y |year=2005 |contribution=Attachment-Based Intervention programs: Implications for Attachment Theory and Research |title=Enhancing Early Attachments. Theory, Research, Intervention and Policy |veditors=Berlin LJ, Ziv Y, Amaya-Jackson L, Greenberg MT |series=Duke series in child development and public policy|publisher=Guilford Press |isbn=978-1-59385-470-6|pages=63}}</ref> It has been described as potentially abusive and a ] intervention that has resulted in tragic outcomes for children.<ref name="Berlin et al.">{{Cite book |author=Berlin LJ |year=2005 |contribution=Preface |title=Enhancing Early Attachments: Theory, Research, Intervention and Policy |veditors=Berlin LJ, Ziv Y, Amaya-Jackson L, Greenberg MT |series=Duke series in child development and public policy |publisher=Guilford Press|isbn=978-1-59385-470-6 | pages=xvii|display-authors=etal}}</ref> | |||
*Handbook of Infant Mental Health, edited by Charles Zeanah, MD, Guilford Press, 1993, NY. | |||
*Handbook of Attachment: Theory, Research, and Clinical Applications, edited by Jude Cassidy, Ph.D., & Phillip Shaver, Ph.D, Guilford Press, NY (1999). | |||
*Building the Bonds of Attachment by Daniel Hughes, Ph.D., Guilford Press, 1999. | |||
*"Treatment for Children with Trauma-Attachment Disorders: Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy" Child and Adolescent Social Work Journal. 12(6), December 2005. | |||
*Creating Capacity For Attachment, (Eds.) Arthur Becker-Weidman, Ph.D., and Deborah Shell, MA, Wood 'N' Barnes, OK: 2005.ISBN 1885473729 | |||
*O'Connor and Zeanah (2003) "Attachment disorders and assessment approaches Attachment and Human Development 5(3)223-244:Taylor and Francis | |||
*Hughes, Daniel, (1999) Building the Bonds of Attachment, NY: Guilford Press. | |||
*Hughes, D. (2004). An attachment-based treatment of maltreated children and young people. Attachment & Human Development, 3, 263–278. | |||
*Hughes, D. (2003). Psychological intervention for the spectrum of attachment disorders and intrafamilial trauma. Attachment & Human Development, 5, 271–279. | |||
A common feature of this form of diagnosis within ] is the use of extensive lists of "symptoms" that include many behaviours that are likely to be a consequence of neglect or abuse, but are not related to attachment, or to any clinical disorder at all. Such lists have been described as "wildly inclusive".<ref>Prior & Glaser (2006) p186-187</ref> The APSAC Taskforce (2006) gives examples of such lists ranging across multiple domains from some elements within the DSM-IV criteria to entirely non-specific behavior such as developmental lags, destructive behavior, refusal to make eye contact, cruelty to animals and siblings, lack of cause and effect thinking, preoccupation with fire, blood and gore, poor peer relationships, stealing, lying, lack of a conscience, persistent nonsense questions or incessant chatter, poor impulse control, abnormal speech patterns, fighting for control over everything, and hoarding or gorging on food. Some checklists suggest that among infants, "prefers dad to mom" or "wants to hold the bottle as soon as possible" are indicative of attachment problems. The APSAC Taskforce expresses concern that "high rates of ] diagnoses are virtually certain" and that "posting these types of lists on web sites that also serve as marketing tools may lead many parents or others to conclude inaccurately that their children have attachment disorders".<ref>Chaffin (2006) p 82</ref> | |||
==External links== | |||
There is also a considerable variety of treatments for alleged attachment disorders diagnosed on the controversial alternative basis outlined above, popularly known as ]. These therapies have little or no evidence base and vary from talking or play therapies to more extreme forms of physical and coercive techniques, of which the best known are ], ], ] and the Evergreen model. In general these therapies are aimed at adopted or fostered children with a view to creating attachment in them to their new caregivers. Critics maintain these therapies are not based on an accepted version of ].<ref>Prior & Glaser (2006) p 262</ref> The theoretical base is broadly a combination of ] and ], accompanied by parenting methods that emphasise ] and parental control.<ref>Chaffin ''et al.'' 2006, p. 79–80. The APSAC Taskforce Report.</ref> These therapies concentrate on changing the child rather than the caregiver.<ref>Chaffin et al. (2006) p 79</ref> An estimated six children have died as a consequence of the more coercive forms of such treatments and the application of the accompanying parenting techniques.<ref>Boris 2003</ref><ref>Mercer, Sarner & Rosa 2003</ref><ref name = zeanah2003/> | |||
* | |||
Two of the best-known cases are those of ] in 2001 and the ] in 2003 to 2005. After the associated publicity, some advocates of attachment therapy began to alter views and practices to be less potentially dangerous to children. This change may have been hastened by the publication of a Task Force Report on the subject in 2006, commissioned by the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children (APSAC), which was largely critical of attachment therapy, although these practices continue.<ref>Chaffin et al. (2006)</ref> In 2007, ATTACh, an organisation originally set up by attachment therapists, formally adopted a White Paper stating its unequivocal opposition to coercive practices in therapy and parenting.<ref name="attach07">{{Cite web|title=ATTACh White paper on coercion|year=2007|url=http://www.attach.org/WhitePaper.pdf|publisher=ATTACh|access-date=2008-03-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928072425/http://www.attach.org/WhitePaper.pdf|archive-date=2007-09-28|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
* | |||
== See also == | |||
* | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
== Notes == | |||
* | |||
{{reflist|2}} | |||
==References== | |||
* | |||
{{refbegin}} | |||
* Ainsworth. Mary D., Blehar, M., Waters, E., &b Wall, S. (1978). ''Patterns of Attachment: A Psychological Study of the Strange Situation.'' Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. {{ISBN|0-89859-461-8}}. | |||
* ] (AACAP)(2005). .(PDF). Boris, N. & Zeanah, C. ''Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Nov; 44:1206–1219'' (Guideline at ) | |||
* {{cite journal|year = 2003|title = Less is more: meta-analyses of sensitivity and attachment interventions in early childhood|url = http://www.childandfamilystudies.leidenuniv.nl/content_docs/agp/Publicaties/baketal03pb.pdf|journal = Psychological Bulletin|volume = 129|issue = 2|pages = 195–215|doi = 10.1037/0033-2909.129.2.195|pmid = 12696839|author1 = Bakermans-Kranenburg M.|author2 = van IJzendoorn M.|author3 = Juffer F.|s2cid = 7504386|access-date = 2007-12-18|archive-date = 2007-02-06|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070206140438/http://www.childandfamilystudies.leidenuniv.nl/content_docs/agp/Publicaties/baketal03pb.pdf|url-status = live}} | |||
* {{cite journal|year = 2001|title = Atypical maternal behaviour toward feeding disordered infants before and after intervention|journal = ]|volume = 22|issue = 6|pages = 611–626|doi = 10.1002/imhj.1022|author1=Benoit D.|author2=Madigan S.|author3=Lecce S.|author4=Shea B.|author5=Goldberg S.}} | |||
*{{cite journal|year = 1999|title = Disturbance and disorders of attachment in infancy: An overview|journal = Infant Mental Health Journal|volume = 20|pages = 1–9|doi = 10.1002/(SICI)1097-0355(199921)20:1<1::AID-IMHJ1>3.0.CO;2-V|author1=Boris N.W.|author2=Zeanah C.H.}} | |||
*{{cite journal|year=2003|title=Attachment, aggression and holding: a cautionary tale|journal=Attach Hum Dev|volume=5|issue=3|pages=245–7|doi=10.1080/14616730310001593947|pmid=12944217|author=Boris NW|s2cid=33982546}} | |||
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* Bretherton, I. and Munholland, K., A. (1999). Internal Working Models in Attachment Relationships: A Construct Revisited. In Cassidy, J. and Shaver, P., R. (eds.) ''Handbook of Attachment: Theory, Research and Clinical Applications.''.pp. 89–111. Guilford Press {{ISBN|1-57230-087-6}}. | |||
* {{cite journal|year=2006|title=Report of the APSAC task force on attachment therapy, reactive attachment disorder, and attachment problems|journal=Child Maltreat|volume=11|issue=1|pages=76–89|doi=10.1177/1077559505283699|pmid=16382093|vauthors=Chaffin M, Hanson R, Saunders BE|s2cid=11443880|display-authors=etal}} | |||
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* Cooper, G., Hoffman, K., Powell, B. and Marvin, R. (2007). The Circle of Security Intervention; differential diagnosis and differential treatment. In Berlin, L.J., Ziv, Y., Amaya-Jackson, L. and Greenberg, M.T. (eds.) ''Enhancing Early Attachments; Theory, research, intervention, and policy.'' The Guilford Press. Duke series in Child Development and Public Policy. pp 127–151. {{ISBN|1-59385-470-6}}. | |||
* {{cite journal | author = Crittenden P. M. | year = 1992 | title = Quality of attachment in the preschool years | url = http://www.patcrittenden.com/Preschool-assesment.html | journal = Development and Psychopathology | volume = 4 | issue = 2 | pages = 209–241 | doi = 10.1017/s0954579400000110 | s2cid = 143894461 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080314161203/http://www.patcrittenden.com/Preschool-assesment.html | archive-date = 2008-03-14 }} | |||
* Dozier, M., Lindheim, O. and Ackerman, J., P. 'Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-Up: An intervention targeting empirically identified needs of foster infants'. In Berlin, L.J., Ziv, Y., Amaya-Jackson, L. and Greenberg, M.T. (eds) ''Enhancing Early Attachments; Theory, research, intervention, and policy'' The Guilford press. Duke series in Child Development and Public Policy. pp 178 – 194. (2005) {{ISBN|1-59385-470-6}} (pbk) | |||
* Interdisciplinary Council on Developmental & Learning Disorders. (2007). | |||
* {{cite journal|year=1998|title=Intensive intervention for maltreated infants and toddlers in foster care|journal=Child Adolesc Psychiatr Clin N Am|volume=7|issue=2|pages=357–71|doi=10.1016/S1056-4993(18)30246-3|pmid=9894069|vauthors=Zeanah CH, Larrieu JA}} | |||
* Larrieu, J.A., & Zeanah, C.H. (2004). Treating infant-parent relationships in the context of maltreatment: An integrated, systems approach. In A.Saner, S. McDonagh, & K. Roesenblaum (eds.) ''Treating parent-infant relationship problems '' (pp. 243–264). New York: Guilford Press {{ISBN|1-59385-245-2}} | |||
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* Lieberman, A.F., Silverman, R., Pawl, J.H. (2000). Infant-parent psychotherapy. In C.H. Zeanah, Jr. (ed.) ''Handbook of infant mental health'' (2nd ed.) (p. 432). New York: Guilford Press. {{ISBN|1-59385-171-5}} | |||
* Main, M. and Solomon, J. (1986). Discovery of an insecure disorganized/disoriented attachment pattern: procedures, findings and implications for the classification of behavior. In T. Braxelton and M.Yogman (eds) Affective development in infancy, (pp. 95–124). Norwood, NJ: Ablex {{ISBN|0-89391-345-6}} | |||
* Main, M. and Solomon, J. (1990). Procedures for identifying infants as disorganized/disoriented during the Ainsworth Strange Situation. In M. Greenberg, D. Cicchetti and E. Cummings (eds) Attachment in the preschool years: Theory, research and intervention, (pp. 121–160). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. {{ISBN|0-226-30630-5}}. | |||
*Mercer, J., Sarner, L., & Rosa, L. (2003). ''Attachment therapy on trial: The torture and death of Candace Newmaker.'' Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers/Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc. {{ISBN|0-275-97675-0}} | |||
* Mercer, J (2006) ''Understanding Attachment: Parenting, child care and emotional development''. Westport, CT: Praeger {{ISBN|0-275-98217-3}} | |||
* Marvin, R., Cooper, G., Hoffman, K. and Powell, B. . ''Attachment & Human Development'' Vol 4 No 1 April 2002 107–124. | |||
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* Prior, V., Glaser, D. Understanding Attachment and Attachment Disorders: Theory, Evidence and Practice (2006). Child and Adolescent Mental Health Series. Jessica Kingsley Publishers London {{ISBN|1-84310-245-5}} {{OCLC|70663735}} | |||
* Schechter, D.S., Willheim, E. (2009). Disturbances of attachment and parental psychopathology in early childhood. Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health Issue. Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Clinics of North America, 18(3), 665–687. | |||
* Smyke, A. and Zeanah, C. (1999). Disturbances of Attachment Interview. Available on the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry website at {{Dead link|date=August 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}<!-- it's not available on wayback or archive.today - it may have been restricted to those with some kind of access. --> | |||
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*{{cite journal | author = Van Ijzendoorn M, Bakermans-Kranenburg | year = 2003| title = Similar and different | journal = Attachment & Human Development | volume = 5 | issue = 3| pages = 313–320 | doi = 10.1080/14616730310001593938 | pmid = 12944229| s2cid = 10644822}} | |||
* Waters, E. and Deane, K (1985). Defining and assessing individual differences in attachment relationships: Q-methodology and the organization of behavior in infancy and early childhood. In I. Bretherton and E. Waters (Eds) ''Growing pains of attachment theory and research: Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development'' 50, Serial No. 209 (1–2), 41–65 | |||
*{{cite journal|year=2003|title=Attachment relationship experiences and childhood psychopathology|url=https://nyaspubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1196/annals.1301.003|journal=]|volume=1008|issue=1|pages=22–30|doi=10.1196/annals.1301.003|pmid=14998869|vauthors=Zeanah CH, Keyes A, Settles L|bibcode=2003NYASA1008...22Z|s2cid=35714985|access-date=2021-11-10|archive-date=2021-11-10|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211110012143/https://nyaspubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1196/annals.1301.003|url-status=live}} | |||
* Zeanah, C., H. and Smyke, A., T. "Building Attachment Relationships Following Maltreatment and Severe Deprivation" In Berlin, L., J., Ziv, Y., Amaya-Jackson, L. and Greenberg, M., T. ''Enhancing Early Attachments; Theory, research, intervention, and policy'' The Guilford Press, 2005 pps 195-216 {{ISBN|1-59385-470-6}} (pbk) | |||
{{refend}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
==Critics== | |||
* Mills, Jon. (2005). ''Treating Attachment Pathology.'' Lanham, MD: Aronson/Rowman & Littlefield. {{ISBN|978-0765701305}} | |||
* Holmes, J (2001). ''The Search for the Secure Base''. Philadelphia: Brunner-Routledge. {{ISBN|1-58391-152-9}} | |||
* Cassidy, J; Shaver, P (eds.) (1999). ''Handbook of Attachment: Theory, Research, and Clinical Applications''. New York: Guilford Press. {{ISBN|1-57230-087-6}}. | |||
* Zeanah, CH (ed.) (1993). ''Handbook of Infant Mental Health''. New York: Guilford Press. {{ISBN|1-59385-171-5}} | |||
* Bowlby, J (1988). ''A Secure Base: Parent-Child Attachment and Healthy Human Development''. London: Routledge; New York: Basic Books. {{ISBN|0-415-00640-6}}. | |||
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Latest revision as of 05:23, 14 April 2024
Broad psychiatric condition Medical conditionAttachment disorder | |
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Specialty | Psychiatry |
Attachment disorder is a broad term intended to describe disorders of mood, behavior, and social relationships arising from unavailability of normal socializing care and attention from primary caregiving figures in early childhood. Such a failure would result from unusual early experiences of neglect, abuse, abrupt separation from caregivers between three months and three years of age, frequent change or excessive numbers of caregivers, or lack of caregiver responsiveness to child communicative efforts resulting in a lack of basic trust. A problematic history of social relationships occurring after about age three may be distressing to a child, but does not result in attachment disorder.
Attachment and attachment disorder
Main articles: Attachment theory and Attachment in childrenAttachment theory is primarily an evolutionary and ethological theory. In relation to infants, it primarily consists of proximity seeking to an attachment figure in the face of threat, for the purpose of survival. Although an attachment is a "tie", it is not synonymous with love and affection, despite their often going together; a healthy attachment is considered an important foundation of all subsequent relationships. Infants become attached to adults who are sensitive and responsive in social interactions with the infant, and who remain consistent caregivers for some time. Parental responses lead to the development of patterns of attachment which in turn lead to "internal working models" that guide one's feelings, thoughts, and expectations in later relationships.
A fundamental aspect of attachment is called basic trust. Basic trust is a broader concept than attachment in that it extends beyond the infant-caregiver relationship to "the wider social network of trustable and caring others" and "links confidence about the past with faith about the future". "Erikson argues that the sense of trust in oneself and others is the foundation of human development" and with a balance of mistrust produces hope.
In the clinical sense, a disorder is a condition requiring treatment as opposed to risk factors for subsequent disorders. There is a lack of consensus about the precise meaning of the term "attachment disorder", but there is general agreement that such disorders arise only after early adverse caregiving experiences. Reactive attachment disorder indicates the absence of either or both the main aspects of proximity seeking to an identified attachment figure. This can occur in institutions, with repeated changes of caregiver, or from extremely neglectful primary caregivers who show persistent disregard for a child's basic attachment needs after the age of 6 months. Current official classifications of RAD under DSM-IV-TR and ICD-10 are largely based on this understanding of the nature of attachment.
The words attachment style or pattern refer to the various types of attachment arising from early care experiences, called secure, anxious-ambivalent, anxious-avoidant, (all organized), and disorganized. Some of these styles are more problematic than others, and, although they are not disorders in the clinical sense, are sometimes discussed under the term 'attachment disorder'.
Discussion of the disorganized attachment style sometimes includes it under the rubric of attachment disorders because disorganized attachment is seen as the beginning of a developmental trajectory that takes a person ever further from the normal range, culminating in actual disorders of thought, behavior, or mood. Early intervention for disorganized attachment, or other problematic styles, is directed toward changing the trajectory of development to provide a better outcome later in life.
Zeanah and colleagues proposed an alternative set of criteria (see below) of three categories of attachment disorder, namely "no discriminated attachment figure", "secure base distortions" and "disrupted attachment disorder". These classifications consider a disorder a variation that requires treatment rather than an individual difference within the normal range.
Boris and Zeanah's typology
Many leading attachment theorists, such as Zeanah and Leiberman, have recognized the limitations of the DSM-IV-TR and ICD-10 criteria and proposed broader diagnostic criteria. There is as yet no official consensus on these criteria. The APSAC Taskforce recognised in its recommendations that "attachment problems extending beyond RAD, are a real and appropriate concern for professionals working with children", and set out recommendations for assessment.
Boris and Zeanah (1999), have offered an approach to attachment disorders that considers cases where children have had no opportunity to form an attachment, those where there is a distorted relationship, and those where an existing attachment has been abruptly disrupted. This would significantly extend the definition beyond the ICD-10 and DSM-IV-TR definitions because those definitions are limited to situations where the child has no attachment or no attachment to a specified attachment figure.
Boris and Zeanah use the term "disorder of attachment" to indicate a situation in which a young child has no preferred adult caregiver. Such children may be indiscriminately sociable and approach all adults, whether familiar or not; alternatively, they may be emotionally withdrawn and fail to seek comfort from anyone. This type of attachment problem is parallel to reactive attachment disorder as defined in DSM and ICD in its inhibited and disinhibited forms as described above.
Boris and Zeanah also describe a condition they term "secure base distortion". In this situation, the child has a preferred familiar caregiver, but the relationship is such that the child cannot use the adult for safety while gradually exploring the environment. Such children may endanger themselves, may cling to the adult, may be excessively compliant, or may show role reversals in which they care for or punish the adult.
The third type of disorder discussed by Boris and Zeanah is termed "disrupted attachment". This type of problem, which is not covered under other approaches to disordered attachment, results from an abrupt separation or loss of a familiar caregiver to whom attachment has developed. The young child's reaction to such a loss is parallel to the grief reaction of an older person, with progressive changes from protest (crying and searching) to despair, sadness, and withdrawal from communication or play, and finally detachment from the original relationship and recovery of social and play activities.
Most recently, Daniel Schechter and Erica Willheim have shown a relationship between maternal violence-related posttraumatic stress disorder and secure base distortion (see above) which is characterized by child recklessness, separation anxiety, hypervigilance, and role-reversal.
Problems of attachment style
Main articles: Attachment theory and Attachment in childrenThe majority of 1-year-old children can tolerate brief separations from familiar caregivers and are quickly comforted when the caregivers return. These children also use familiar people as a "secure base" and return to them periodically when exploring a new situation. Such children are said to have a secure attachment style, and characteristically continue to develop well both cognitively and emotionally.
Smaller numbers of children show less positive development at age 12 months. Their less desirable attachment styles may be predictors of poor later social development. Although these children's behavior at 12 months is not a serious problem, they appear to be on developmental trajectories that will end in poor social skills and relationships. Because attachment styles may serve as predictors of later development, it may be appropriate to think of certain attachment styles as part of the range of attachment disorders.
Insecure attachment styles in toddlers involve unusual reunions after separation from a familiar person. The children may snub the returning caregiver, or may go to the person but then resist being picked up. They may reunite with the caregiver, but then persistently cling to the caregiver, and fail to return to their previous play. These children are more likely to have later social problems with peers and teachers, but some of them spontaneously develop better ways of interacting with other people.
A small group of toddlers show a distressing way of reuniting after a separation. Called a disorganized/disoriented style, this reunion pattern can involve looking dazed or frightened, freezing in place, backing toward the caregiver or approaching with head sharply averted, or showing other behaviors that seem to imply fearfulness of the person who is being sought. Disorganized attachment has been considered a major risk factor for child psychopathology, as it appears to interfere with regulation or tolerance of negative emotions and may thus foster aggressive behavior. Disorganized patterns of attachment have the strongest links to concurrent and subsequent psychopathology, and considerable research has demonstrated both within-the-child and environmental correlates of disorganized attachment.
Possible mechanisms
One study has reported a connection between a specific genetic marker and disorganized attachment (not RAD) associated with problems of parenting. Another author has compared atypical social behavior in genetic conditions such as Williams syndrome with behaviors symptomatic of RAD.
Typical attachment development begins with unlearned infant reactions to social signals from caregivers. The ability to send and receive social communications through facial expressions, gestures and voice develops with social experience by seven to nine months. This makes it possible for an infant to interpret messages of calm or alarm from face or voice. At about eight months, infants typically begin to respond with fear to unfamiliar or startling situations, and to look to the faces of familiar caregivers for information that either justifies or soothes their fear. This developmental combination of social skills and the emergence of fear reactions results in attachment behavior such as proximity-seeking, if a familiar, sensitive, responsive, and cooperative adult is available. Further developments in attachment, such as negotiation of separation in the toddler and preschool period, depend on factors such as the caregiver's interaction style and ability to understand the child's emotional communications.
With insensitive or unresponsive caregivers, or frequent changes, an infant may have few experiences that encourage proximity seeking to a familiar person. An infant who experiences fear but who cannot find comforting information in an adult's face and voice may develop atypical ways of coping with fearfulness such as the maintenance of distance from adults, or the seeking of proximity to all adults. These symptoms accord with the DSM criteria for reactive attachment disorder. Either of these behavior patterns may create a developmental trajectory leading ever farther from typical attachment processes such as the development of an internal working model of social relationships that facilitates both the giving and the receiving of care from others.
Atypical development of fearfulness, with a constitutional tendency either to excessive or inadequate fear reactions, might be necessary before an infant is vulnerable to the effects of poor attachment experiences.
Alternatively, the two variations of RAD may develop from the same inability to develop "stranger-wariness" due to inadequate care. Appropriate fear responses may only be able to develop after an infant has first begun to form a selective attachment. An infant who is not in a position to do this cannot afford not to show interest in any person as they may be potential attachment figures. Faced with a swift succession of carers the child may have no opportunity to form a selective attachment until the possible biologically determined sensitive period for developing stranger-wariness has passed. It is thought this process may lead to the disinhibited form.
In the inhibited form infants behave as if their attachment system has been "switched off". However the innate capacity for attachment behavior cannot be lost. This may explain why children diagnosed with the inhibited form of RAD from institutions almost invariably go on to show formation of attachment behavior to good carers. However children with the inhibited form as a consequence of neglect and frequent changes of caregiver continue to show the inhibited form for far longer when placed in families.
Additionally, the development of Theory of Mind may play a role in emotional development. Theory of Mind is the ability to know that the experience of knowledge and intention lies behind human actions such as facial expressions. Although it is reported that very young infants have different responses to humans than to non-human objects, Theory of Mind develops relatively gradually and possibly results from predictable interactions with adults. However, some ability of this kind must be in place before mutual communication through gaze or other gesture can occur, as it does by seven to nine months. Some neurodevelopmental disorders, such as autism, have been attributed to the absence of the mental functions that underlie Theory of Mind. It is possible that the congenital absence of this ability, or the lack of experiences with caregivers who communicate in a predictable fashion, could underlie the development of reactive attachment disorder.
Diagnosis
Main article: Attachment measuresRecognised assessment methods of attachment styles, difficulties or disorders include the Strange Situation procedure (Mary Ainsworth), the separation and reunion procedure and the Preschool Assessment of Attachment ("PAA"), the Observational Record of the Caregiving Environment ("ORCE") and the Attachment Q-sort ("AQ-sort"). More recent research also uses the Disturbances of Attachment Interview or "DAI" developed by Smyke and Zeanah, (1999). This is a semi-structured interview designed to be administered by clinicians to caregivers. It covers 12 items, namely having a discriminated, preferred adult, seeking comfort when distressed, responding to comfort when offered, social and emotional reciprocity, emotional regulation, checking back after venturing away from the care giver, reticence with unfamiliar adults, willingness to go off with relative strangers, self endangering behavior, excessive clinging, vigilance/hypercompliance and role reversal.
Classification
Main article: Reactive attachment disorderICD-10 describes Reactive Attachment Disorder of Childhood, known as RAD, and Disinhibited Disorder of Childhood, less well known as DAD. DSM-IV-TR also describes Reactive Attachment Disorder of Infancy or Early Childhood. It divides this into two subtypes, Inhibited Type and Disinhibited Type, both known as RAD. The two classifications are similar and both include:
- markedly disturbed and developmentally inappropriate social relatedness in most contexts,
- the disturbance is not accounted for solely by developmental delay and does not meet the criteria for Pervasive Developmental Disorder,
- onset before 5 years of age,
- requires a history of significant neglect, and
- implicit lack of identifiable, preferred attachment figure.
ICD-10 includes in its diagnosis psychological and physical abuse and injury in addition to neglect. This is somewhat controversial, being a commission rather than omission and because abuse in and of itself does not lead to attachment disorder .
The inhibited form is described as "a failure to initiate or respond ... to most social interactions, as manifest by excessively inhibited responses" and such infants do not seek and accept comfort at times of threat, alarm or distress, thus failing to maintain 'proximity', an essential element of attachment behavior. The disinhibited form shows "indiscriminate sociability ... excessive familiarity with relative strangers" (DSM-IV-TR) and therefore a lack of 'specificity', the second basic element of attachment behavior. The ICD-10 descriptions are comparable. 'Disinhibited' and 'inhibited' are not opposites in terms of attachment disorder and can co-exist in the same child. The inhibited form has a greater tendency to ameliorate with an appropriate caregiver whilst the disinhibited form is more enduring.
While RAD is likely to occur following neglectful and abusive childcare, there should be no automatic diagnosis on this basis alone as children can form stable attachments and social relationships despite marked abuse and neglect. Abuse can occur alongside the required factors but on its own does not explain attachment disorder. Experiences of abuse are associated with the development of disorganised attachment, in which the child prefers a familiar caregiver, but responds to that person in an unpredictable and somewhat bizarre way. Within official classifications, attachment disorganization is a risk factor but not in itself an attachment disorder. Further, although attachment disorders tend to occur in the context of some institutions, repeated changes of primary caregiver, or extremely neglectful identifiable primary caregivers who show persistent disregard for the child's basic attachment needs, not all children raised in these conditions develop an attachment disorder.
Treatment
Main article: Attachment-based therapy (children)There are a variety of mainstream prevention programs and treatment approaches for attachment disorder, attachment problems and moods or behaviors considered to be potential problems within the context of attachment theory. All such approaches for infants and younger children concentrate on increasing the responsiveness and sensitivity of the caregiver, or if that is not possible, changing the caregiver. Such approaches include 'Watch, wait and wonder,' manipulation of sensitive responsiveness, modified 'Interaction Guidance,'. 'Preschool Parent Psychotherapy,'. Circle of Security', Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-up (ABC), the New Orleans Intervention, and Parent-Child psychotherapy. Other known treatment methods include Developmental, Individual-difference, Relationship-based therapy (DIR) (also referred to as Floor Time) by Stanley Greenspan, although DIR is primarily directed to treatment of pervasive developmental disorders Some of these approaches, such as that suggested by Dozier, consider the attachment status of the adult caregiver to play an important role in the development of the emotional connection between adult and child. This includes foster parents, as children with poor attachment experiences often do not elicit appropriate caregiver responses from their attachment behaviors despite 'normative' care.
Treatment for reactive attachment disorder for children usually involves a mix of therapy, counseling, and parenting education. These must be designed to make sure the child has a safe environment to live in and to develop positive interactions with caregivers and improves their relationships with their peers.
Medication can be used to treat similar conditions, like depression, anxiety, or hyperactivity, but there is no quick fix for reactive attachment disorder. A pediatrician may recommend a treatment plan, such as a mix of family therapy, individual psychological counseling, play therapy, special education services and parenting skills classes.
Pseudoscientific diagnoses and treatment
Main article: Attachment therapyIn the absence of officially recognized diagnostic criteria, and beyond the ambit of the discourse on a broader set of criteria discussed above, the term "attachment disorder" has been increasingly used by clinicians to refer to a broader set of children whose behavior may be affected by lack of a primary attachment figure, a seriously unhealthy attachment relationship with a primary caregiver, or a disrupted attachment relationship. Although there are no studies examining diagnostic accuracy, concern is expressed as to the potential for over-diagnosis based on broad checklists and 'snapshots'. This form of therapy, including diagnosis and accompanying parenting techniques, is scientifically unvalidated and is not considered part of mainstream psychology or, despite its name, to be based on attachment theory, with which it is considered incompatible. It has been described as potentially abusive and a pseudoscientific intervention that has resulted in tragic outcomes for children.
A common feature of this form of diagnosis within attachment therapy is the use of extensive lists of "symptoms" that include many behaviours that are likely to be a consequence of neglect or abuse, but are not related to attachment, or to any clinical disorder at all. Such lists have been described as "wildly inclusive". The APSAC Taskforce (2006) gives examples of such lists ranging across multiple domains from some elements within the DSM-IV criteria to entirely non-specific behavior such as developmental lags, destructive behavior, refusal to make eye contact, cruelty to animals and siblings, lack of cause and effect thinking, preoccupation with fire, blood and gore, poor peer relationships, stealing, lying, lack of a conscience, persistent nonsense questions or incessant chatter, poor impulse control, abnormal speech patterns, fighting for control over everything, and hoarding or gorging on food. Some checklists suggest that among infants, "prefers dad to mom" or "wants to hold the bottle as soon as possible" are indicative of attachment problems. The APSAC Taskforce expresses concern that "high rates of false positive diagnoses are virtually certain" and that "posting these types of lists on web sites that also serve as marketing tools may lead many parents or others to conclude inaccurately that their children have attachment disorders".
There is also a considerable variety of treatments for alleged attachment disorders diagnosed on the controversial alternative basis outlined above, popularly known as attachment therapy. These therapies have little or no evidence base and vary from talking or play therapies to more extreme forms of physical and coercive techniques, of which the best known are holding therapy, rebirthing, rage-reduction and the Evergreen model. In general these therapies are aimed at adopted or fostered children with a view to creating attachment in them to their new caregivers. Critics maintain these therapies are not based on an accepted version of attachment theory. The theoretical base is broadly a combination of regression and catharsis, accompanied by parenting methods that emphasise obedience and parental control. These therapies concentrate on changing the child rather than the caregiver. An estimated six children have died as a consequence of the more coercive forms of such treatments and the application of the accompanying parenting techniques.
Two of the best-known cases are those of Candace Newmaker in 2001 and the Gravelles in 2003 to 2005. After the associated publicity, some advocates of attachment therapy began to alter views and practices to be less potentially dangerous to children. This change may have been hastened by the publication of a Task Force Report on the subject in 2006, commissioned by the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children (APSAC), which was largely critical of attachment therapy, although these practices continue. In 2007, ATTACh, an organisation originally set up by attachment therapists, formally adopted a White Paper stating its unequivocal opposition to coercive practices in therapy and parenting.
See also
- Reactive attachment disorder
- Disinhibited social engagement disorder
- Adult Attachment Disorder
- Complex post-traumatic stress disorder
- Dead mother complex
- Emotional dysregulation
- John Bowlby
Notes
- Fonagy, Peter. Attachment Theory and Psychoanalysis. Other Professional, 2010. Print.
- Bowlby (1970) p 181
- Bretherton & Munholland (1999) p 89
- ^ Newman, Barbara M., and Philip R. Newman. Development through Life: A Psychosocial Approach. 12th ed. Stamford: Cengage Learning, 2015. 177. Print. ISBN 9781285459967
- Kail, Robert V., and John C. Cavanaugh. Human Development: A Life-span View. 5th ed. Australia: Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2010. 168. Print.
- AACAP 2005, p1208
- Levy K.N. et al. (2005)
- Prior & Glaser (2006) p 223
- Chaffin (2006) p 86
- Boris & Zeannah (1999)
- Schechter DS, Willheim E (2009). Disturbances of attachment and parental psychopathology in early childhood. Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health Issue. Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Clinics of North America, 18(3), 665-687.
- Mercer, J (2006) p 107
- VanIJzendoorn & Bakermans-Kranenburg (2003)
- ^ Zeanah et al. (2003)
- Van Ijzendoorn MH, Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ (2006). "DRD4 7-repeat polymorphism moderates the association between maternal unresolved loss or trauma and infant disorganization". Attach Hum Dev. 8 (4): 291–307. doi:10.1080/14616730601048159. PMID 17178609. S2CID 27646011.
- Zeanah CH (2007). "Reactive Attachment Disorder". In Narrow WE, First MB et al. (Eds.) Gender and age consideration in psychiatric diagnosis. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association. ISBN 0-89042-295-8.
- Dozier M, Stovall KC, Albus KE, Bates B (2001). "Attachment for infants in foster care: the role of caregiver state of mind". Child Dev. 72 (5): 1467–77. doi:10.1111/1467-8624.00360. PMID 11699682.
- DSM-IV American Psychiatric Association 1994
- Mercer J, Sarner L and Rosa L (2003) Attachment Therapy on Trial: The Torture and Death of Candace Newmaker. Westport, CT: Praeger ISBN 0-275-97675-0, pp. 98–103.
- Mercer (2006), pp. 64–70.
- Marshall, P.J.; Fox, N.A. (2005). "Relationship between behavioral reactivity at 4 months and attachment classification at 14 months in a selected sample". Infant Behavior and Development. 28 (4): 492–502. doi:10.1016/j.infbeh.2005.06.002.
- ^ Prior and Glaser p.
- Mercer (2006) p.
- Fonagy P, Gergely G, Jurist EL, Target M (2006). Affect Regulation, Mentalization, and the Development of Self. Other Press (NY) ISBN 1-892746-34-4
- Ainsworth (1978),
- Main & Solomon (1986), pp.95-124.
- Main & Solomon (1990), pp. 121-160.
- Crittenden (1992)
- National Institute of Child Health and Human Development(1996)
- Waters and Deane (1985)
- Smyke and Zeanah (1999)
- Prior & Glaser 2006, p. 220-221.
- Prior & Glaser (2006) p218-219
- Prior & Glaser (2006), p. 231.
- AACAP (2005) p. 17-18.
- BakermansKranenburg et al. (2003) A meta-analysis of early interventions.
- O'Hara, Leeanne; Smith, Emily R.; Barlow, Jane; Livingstone, Nuala; Herath, Nadeeja Ins; Wei, Yinghui; Spreckelsen, Thees Frerich; Macdonald, Geraldine (29 November 2019). "Video feedback for parental sensitivity and attachment security in children under five years". The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2019 (11): CD012348. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD012348.pub2. ISSN 1469-493X. PMC 6883766. PMID 31782528.
- Cohen et al. (1999)
- van den Boom (1994)
- van den Boom (1995)
- Benoit et al. (2001)
- Toth et al. (2002)
- Marvin et al. (2002)
- Cooper et al. (2005)
- ^ Dozier et al. (2005)
- Larrieu & Zeanah (1998)
- Larrieu & Zeannah (2004)
- Zeannah & Smyke (2005)
- Leiberman et al. (2000), p. 432.
- Interdisciplinary Council on Developmental & Learning Disorders. (2007). Dir/floortime model Archived 2008-02-25 at the Wayback Machine.
- "Attachment Disorders & Reactive Attachment Disorder: Symptoms, Treatment & Hope for Children with Insecure Attachment". Archived from the original on 2011-11-26. Retrieved 2011-12-01., 'HelpGuide.org', 2011.
- Chaffin et al., (2006) p 81
- Chaffin et al. (2006) p 82
- O'Connor TG, Zeanah CH (2003). "Attachment disorders: assessment strategies and treatment approaches". Attach Hum Dev. 5 (3): 223–44. doi:10.1080/14616730310001593974. PMID 12944216. S2CID 21547653.
- Ziv Y (2005). "Attachment-Based Intervention programs: Implications for Attachment Theory and Research". In Berlin LJ, Ziv Y, Amaya-Jackson L, Greenberg MT (eds.). Enhancing Early Attachments. Theory, Research, Intervention and Policy. Duke series in child development and public policy. Guilford Press. p. 63. ISBN 978-1-59385-470-6.
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- Prior & Glaser (2006) p186-187
- Chaffin (2006) p 82
- Prior & Glaser (2006) p 262
- Chaffin et al. 2006, p. 79–80. The APSAC Taskforce Report.
- Chaffin et al. (2006) p 79
- Boris 2003
- Mercer, Sarner & Rosa 2003
- Chaffin et al. (2006)
- "ATTACh White paper on coercion" (PDF). ATTACh. 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2008-03-16.
References
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Further reading
- Mills, Jon. (2005). Treating Attachment Pathology. Lanham, MD: Aronson/Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0765701305
- Holmes, J (2001). The Search for the Secure Base. Philadelphia: Brunner-Routledge. ISBN 1-58391-152-9
- Cassidy, J; Shaver, P (eds.) (1999). Handbook of Attachment: Theory, Research, and Clinical Applications. New York: Guilford Press. ISBN 1-57230-087-6.
- Zeanah, CH (ed.) (1993). Handbook of Infant Mental Health. New York: Guilford Press. ISBN 1-59385-171-5
- Bowlby, J (1988). A Secure Base: Parent-Child Attachment and Healthy Human Development. London: Routledge; New York: Basic Books. ISBN 0-415-00640-6.
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