Recovering from early deprivation: attachment mediates effects of caregiving on psychopathology

L McGoron, MM Gleason, AT Smyke, SS Drury… - Journal of the american …, 2012 - Elsevier
L McGoron, MM Gleason, AT Smyke, SS Drury, CA Nelson III, MC Gregas, NA Fox
Journal of the american academy of child & adolescent psychiatry, 2012Elsevier
OBJECTIVE: Children exposed to early institutional rearing are at risk for developing
psychopathology. The present investigation examines caregiving quality and the role of
attachment security as they relate to symptoms of psychopathology in young children
exposed to early institutionalization. METHOD: Participants were enrolled in the Bucharest
Early Intervention Project (BEIP), a longitudinal intervention study of children abandoned
and placed in institutions at or shortly after birth. Measures included observed caregiving …
OBJECTIVE
Children exposed to early institutional rearing are at risk for developing psychopathology. The present investigation examines caregiving quality and the role of attachment security as they relate to symptoms of psychopathology in young children exposed to early institutionalization.
METHOD
Participants were enrolled in the Bucharest Early Intervention Project (BEIP), a longitudinal intervention study of children abandoned and placed in institutions at or shortly after birth. Measures included observed caregiving when children were 30 months of age, observed attachment security at 42 months, and caregiver reports of children's psychopathology at 54 months. At 54 months, some children remained in institutions, others were in foster care, others had been adopted domestically, and still others had been returned to their biological families. Thus, the children had experienced varying amounts of institutional rearing.
RESULTS
After controlling for gender, quality of caregiving when children were 30 months old was associated with symptoms of multiple domains of psychopathology at 54 months of age. Ratings of security of attachment at 42 months mediated the associations between quality caregiving at 30 months and fewer symptoms of psychopathology at 54 months.
CONCLUSIONS
Among deprived young children, high-quality caregiving at 30 months predicted reduced psychopathology and functional impairment at 54 months. Security of attachment mediated this relationship. Interventions for young children who have experienced deprivation may benefit from explicitly targeting caregiver–child attachment relationships.
Elsevier
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