32 results on '"van IJzendoorn, Marinus H."'
Search Results
2. Do Intervention Programs in Child Care Promote the Quality of Caregiver-Child Interactions? A Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials.
- Author
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Werner CD, Linting M, Vermeer HJ, and Van IJzendoorn MH
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Databases, Factual, Humans, Infant, Program Evaluation, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Caregivers, Child Care standards, Quality Improvement
- Abstract
This meta-analysis reports on the effectiveness of targeted interventions focusing on child care professionals to improve child care quality, caregiver interaction skills, and child social-emotional development. Within randomized controlled trials, interventions are moderately effective in improving overall caregiver-child interactions (k = 19, Hedges' g = 0.35) and in improving child care quality on the classroom level (k = 11; Hedges' g = 0.39), the caregiver level (k = 10; Hedges' g = 0.44), and the child level (k = 6; Hedges' g = 0.26). Based on these findings, the implementation of evidence-based targeted interventions on a larger scale than currently exists may lead to better social-emotional development for children under the age of 5 years. There remains, however, an urgent need for more and larger randomized controlled trials with a solid design and high quality measures in order to shed more light on which child care components for which children are most critical in supporting children's socio-emotional development.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Normal variation in early parental sensitivity predicts child structural brain development.
- Author
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Kok R, Thijssen S, Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ, Jaddoe VW, Verhulst FC, White T, van IJzendoorn MH, and Tiemeier H
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Linear Models, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Netherlands, Prospective Studies, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Caregivers psychology, Cerebral Cortex pathology, Child Development, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology
- Abstract
Objective: Early caregiving can have an impact on brain structure and function in children. The influence of extreme caregiving experiences has been demonstrated, but studies on the influence of normal variation in parenting quality are scarce. Moreover, no studies to date have included the role of both maternal and paternal sensitivity in child brain maturation. This study examined the prospective relation between mothers' and fathers' sensitive caregiving in early childhood and brain structure later in childhood., Method: Participants were enrolled in a population-based prenatal cohort. For 191 families, maternal and paternal sensitivity was repeatedly observed when the child was between 1 year and 4 years of age. Head circumference was assessed at 6 weeks, and brain structure was assessed using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measurements at 8 years of age., Results: Higher levels of parental sensitivity in early childhood were associated with larger total brain volume (adjusted β = 0.15, p = .01) and gray matter volume (adjusted β = 0.16, p = .01) at 8 years, controlling for infant head size. Higher levels of maternal sensitivity in early childhood were associated with a larger gray matter volume (adjusted β = 0.13, p = .04) at 8 years, independent of infant head circumference. Associations with maternal versus paternal sensitivity were not significantly different., Conclusion: Normal variation in caregiving quality is related to markers of more optimal brain development in children. The results illustrate the important role of both mothers and fathers in child brain development., (Copyright © 2015 American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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4. Salivary α-amylase and intended harsh caregiving in response to infant crying: evidence for physiological hyperreactivity.
- Author
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Out D, Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ, van Pelt J, and Van Ijzendoorn MH
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- Adult, Child Abuse prevention & control, Female, Humans, Infant Behavior psychology, Infant Care psychology, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pitch Perception, Psychomotor Agitation psychology, Regression Analysis, Saliva chemistry, Caregivers psychology, Crying, Parenting psychology, Psychomotor Agitation enzymology, Saliva enzymology, Salivary alpha-Amylases analysis, Salivary alpha-Amylases metabolism
- Abstract
This is the first study on adults' physiological reactivity to infant cry sounds and the association with intended harsh parenting using salivary α-amylase (sAA) as a novel and noninvasive marker of autonomic nervous system activity. The sample consisted of 184 adult twin pairs. In an experimental design, cry sounds were presented and adults' perception and their intended caregiving responses were measured. Saliva samples were collected after each cry sound. For the majority of the sample, a decrease in sAA across the cry paradigm was observed. However, adults who indicated that they would respond in a harsh way to the crying infant were significantly less likely to show a decrease in sAA. Consistent with previous studies on physiological hyperreactivity in abusive parents, these findings suggest that failure to habituate to repeated infant crying may be one of the mediating mechanisms through which excessive, inconsolable, and high-pitched infant crying triggers less optimal caregiving.
- Published
- 2012
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5. Enhancing home-based child care quality through video-feedback intervention: a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Groeneveld MG, Vermeer HJ, van Ijzendoorn MH, and Linting M
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Attitude, Child Care standards, Child, Preschool, Feedback, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Netherlands, Quality of Health Care, Surveys and Questionnaires, Video Recording, Caregivers education, Caregivers psychology, Child Care methods, Child Care psychology
- Abstract
In the present randomized controlled trial, the effectiveness of video-feedback intervention to promote positive parenting-child care (VIPP-CC) was tested in home-based child care. Forty-eight caregivers were randomly assigned either to the intervention group or to the control group. Global child care quality improved in the intervention group but not in the control group. The program did not change observed caregiver sensitivity. After the intervention however, caregivers in the intervention group reported a more positive attitude toward sensitive caregiving than caregivers in the control group. The study shows that the family-based intervention can be applied with some minor modifications in a professional group setting as well. The brief VIPP-CC program is an important tool for enhancing quality of home-based child care., (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2011 APA, all rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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6. Intended sensitive and harsh caregiving responses to infant crying: the role of cry pitch and perceived urgency in an adult twin sample.
- Author
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Out D, Pieper S, Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ, Zeskind PS, and van Ijzendoorn MH
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Anger, Child Abuse prevention & control, Computer Simulation, Crying physiology, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Netherlands, Parenting psychology, Regression Analysis, Young Adult, Caregivers psychology, Crying psychology, Infant Behavior psychology, Infant Care psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Pitch Perception
- Abstract
Objective: To examine the underlying mechanisms of adults' intended caregiving responses to cry sounds in a behavioral genetic design and to investigate the role of cry pitch and perceived urgency in sensitive and harsh caregiving responses., Methods: The sample consisted of 184 adult twin pairs (18-69 years), including males and females, parents and nonparents. In an experimental design we presented cry sounds varying in pitch and measured adults' perception and their intended caregiving responses. Cry stimuli were based on a 10-second cry sample of a 2-day-old infant with a fundamental frequency averaging 500 Hz. Two additional cry sounds were created by digitally increasing the fundamental frequency to 700 and 900 Hz., Results: Individual differences in the perceived urgency of infant crying and intended sensitive caregiving responses were explained by genetic factors (38% and 39%, respectively), while the variance in harsh caregiving responses was due to shared (31%) and unique (69%) environmental influences. Adults were more likely to indicate sensitive caregiving responses to higher-pitched cry sounds and when they perceived the cries as more urgent, while high-pitched cry sounds were also directly associated with harsh caregiving responses., Conclusions: The influence of genetic factors on intended caregiving responses to infant crying is substantial for normal variations in sensitive caregiving, but absent for harsh caregiving responses. The findings suggest that the perception of infant crying as urgent paves the way for more immediate and affectionate caregiving responses, while an extreme increase in cry pitch may present a direct risk factor for more irritated, negative and even harsh parenting., Practice Implications: Infants who display abnormal cry acoustics such as extreme increases in pitch may be at risk for harsh parenting. Interventions should promote parental sensitive response to distress vocalizations to prevent harsh parenting in case of at-risk infants., (Copyright © 2010. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2010
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7. Earlier is better: a meta-analysis of 70 years of intervention improving cognitive development in institutionalized children.
- Author
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Bakermans-Kranenburg MJ, van Ijzendoorn MH, and Juffer F
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- Adoption psychology, Anthropometry, Child Care methods, Child, Preschool, Developmental Disabilities diagnosis, Developmental Disabilities psychology, Early Intervention, Educational, Foster Home Care psychology, Humans, Infant, Intelligence, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Touch, Caregivers education, Child Care psychology, Child, Orphaned psychology, Developmental Disabilities therapy, Orphanages, Psychosocial Deprivation
- Published
- 2008
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8. Attachment representations of institutionalized adolescents and their professional caregivers: predicting the development of therapeutic relationships.
- Author
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Zegers MAM, Schuengel C, van IJzendoorn MH, and Janssens JMAM
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- Adolescent, Affective Symptoms psychology, Affective Symptoms rehabilitation, Child Behavior Disorders psychology, Child Behavior Disorders rehabilitation, Defense Mechanisms, Female, Hostility, Humans, Juvenile Delinquency psychology, Juvenile Delinquency rehabilitation, Male, Mental Disorders psychology, Mentors psychology, Milieu Therapy, Prognosis, Caregivers psychology, Mental Disorders rehabilitation, Object Attachment, Professional-Patient Relations, Psychotherapy, Residential Treatment
- Abstract
This study prospectively examined the effects of adolescent (N=81) and professional caregiver (N=33) attachment representations, measured using the Adult Attachment Interview, on therapeutic relationships in a youth treatment institution. After the first 3 months of the clients' stay in the institution, no effects of adolescents' or mentors' (i.e., the professional caregiver assigned) security and type of attachment representations were found. In a subgroup of 28 clients staying for a longer period, more secure adolescents were perceived by their mentors as increasing their secure base use and decreasing avoidance of contact, whereas more secure mentors were increasingly perceived as available as a secure base. Moreover, specific combinations of attachment representations of mentor and adolescent had different effects on adolescent hostility., (2006 APA, all rights reserved)
- Published
- 2006
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9. Early experiences and attachment relationships of Greek infants raised in residential group care.
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Vorria P, Papaligoura Z, Dunn J, van IJzendoorn MH, Steele H, Kontopoulou A, and Sarafidou Y
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- Analysis of Variance, Child Day Care Centers, Cognition physiology, Female, Greece, Humans, Infant, Male, Maternal Behavior psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Social Behavior, Temperament physiology, Caregivers psychology, Group Homes, Interpersonal Relations, Object Attachment
- Abstract
Background: The attachment relationships of infants reared in residential group care from birth, and links between attachment quality and psychosocial development and caregiver sensitivity were studied, with 86 infants reared in group care and 41 infants reared in their own two-parent families who attended day-care centres., Methods: Attachment, cognitive development, temperament, and observed social behaviour of the two groups were studied, as was the quality of care by caregivers and mothers., Results: Sixty-six per cent of infants reared in residential group care showed disorganised attachment to their caregivers, compared with 25% of control infants; 24% of group care infants were securely attached, compared with 41% of control infants. The two groups differed in cognitive development, in temperament and observed social behaviour. Within the residential group care babies, those that were securely attached were observed to express more frequent positive affect and social behaviour, and to initiate more frequent interaction with their caregivers., Conclusions: Residential care affected all aspects of the infants' development and was linked to a high rate of disorganised attachment.
- Published
- 2003
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10. The Importance of Quality of Care: Effects of Perinatal HIV Infection and Early Institutional Rearing on Preschoolers' Attachment and Indiscriminate Friendliness
- Author
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Dobrova-Krol, Natasha A., Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J., Van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., and Juffer, Femmie
- Abstract
Background: The rearing environment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected children is often compromised, putting these children at additional risks. Positive caregiving may ameliorate the impact of adverse circumstances and promote attachment security. The goal of the present study was to examine the attachment relationships of HIV-infected children in biological families and institutions; to examine the effects of HIV infection and institutional rearing on attachment security and indiscriminate friendliness; and to assess the role of caregiving in the face of HIV-related adversities. Methods: We studied 64 Ukrainian uninfected and HIV-infected children reared in families and institutions (mean age 50.9 months). Physical and cognitive development of children as well as attachment-related domains and indiscriminate friendliness were assessed. Results: Institutional care but not the presence of HIV was associated with lower levels of attachment security and higher levels of indiscriminate friendliness. On average, the level of indiscriminate friendliness among institution-reared children was more than twice as high as among family-reared children. Only 24% of institution-reared children had clearly developed attachment patterns, as opposed to 97% among family-reared children. Controlling for physical and cognitive development, type of care (institution or family), and HIV status, positive caregiving was associated with higher levels of attachment security. Indiscriminate friendliness was associated with lower levels of attachment security among family-reared children, but with higher levels of positive caregiving among institution-reared children. Conclusions: Etiology and function of indiscriminate friendliness may differ for family-reared versus institution-reared children. The findings of this study suggest the necessity of early interventions improving the quality of care for HIV-infected children. (Contains 3 tables and 1 figure.)
- Published
- 2010
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11. Children's Wellbeing and Cortisol Levels in Home-Based and Center-Based Childcare
- Author
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Groeneveld, Marleen G., Vermeer, Harriet J., and van IJzendoorn, Marinus H.
- Abstract
The central question in this study is whether individual variability in children's cortisol levels and wellbeing at childcare can be explained by indices of quality of care and child characteristics. Participants were 71 children from childcare homes and 45 children from childcare centers in the age range of 20-40 months. In both types of settings equivalent measures and procedures were used. In home-based childcare, children experienced higher caregiver sensitivity, lower noise levels, and showed higher wellbeing compared to children in childcare centers. Caregiver sensitivity in home-based childcare--but not in center care--was positively associated with children's wellbeing. Additionally, children displayed higher cortisol levels at childcare than at home, irrespective of type of care. In home-based childcare, lower caregiver sensitivity was associated with higher total production of salivary cortisol during the day. In center-based childcare, lower global quality of care was associated with a rise in cortisol between 11 AM and 3 PM during the day. Quality of care is an important factor in young children's wellbeing and HPA stress reactivity. (Contains 6 tables and 2 figures.)
- Published
- 2010
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12. Children's Attachment Relationships with Day Care Caregivers: Associations with Positive Caregiving and the Child's Temperament
- Author
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De Schipper, J. Clasien, Tavecchio, Louis W. C., and Van IJzendoorn, Marinus H.
- Abstract
In this study, children's attachment relationships with their professional caregivers in center day care were observed for 48 children. We explored whether more positive caregiving was associated with a more secure attachment relationship and whether this association was stronger for more temperamentally irritable children compared to less irritable children. Trained observers coded the attachment relationship in the day care setting using the attachment Q-sort. The observational record of the caregiving environment was used to assess children's individual experience of positive caregiver-child interaction in the classroom. When caregivers showed more frequent positive caregiving behavior, children showed more secure attachment behavior toward their primary professional caregiver. Temperament was not related to attachment security, nor did it serve as a moderator. Consequently, no support for Belsky's susceptibility hypothesis was found.
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- 2008
- Full Text
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13. Play Behavior and Attachment in Toddlers with Autism
- Author
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Naber, Fabienne B. A., Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J., and van IJzendoorn, Marinus H.
- Abstract
Play helps to develop social skills. Children with autism show deviances in their play behavior that may be associated with delays in their social development. In this study, we investigated manipulative, functional and symbolic play behavior of toddlers with and without autism (mean age: 26.45, SD 5.63). The results showed that the quality of interaction between the child and the caregiver was related to the development of play behavior. In particular, security of attachment was related to better play behavior. When the developmental level of the child is taken into account, the attachment relationship of the child with the caregiver at this young age is a better predictor of the level of play behavior than the child's disorder.
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- 2008
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14. Stability in Center Day Care: Relations with Children's Well-Being and Problem Behavior in Day Care
- Author
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de Schipper, J. Clasien, Van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., and Tavecchio, Louis W. C.
- Abstract
Mothers and primary professional caregivers of 186 children, aged 6-30 months, participated in this study in which a new measure for daily stability in center day care was developed, describing staffing, grouping, and program features. Relative contributions of infants' daily experiences of care stability, quality of care, and mother's daily stress to the child's adjustment to day care were analyzed with hierarchical regressions. The child's adjustment was assessed with the Child Behavior Checklist (Achenbach, 1997) and with the Leiden Inventory for the Child's Well-being in Day Care. Children enrolled in fewer care arrangements showed less internalizing behavior and more well-being in the day care setting. Children had higher well-being scores when trusted caregivers were more available. Mother's family management stress was related to more internalizing problem behavior. Interactions between mother's daily stress and stability in care were found to affect the child's adjustment to day care.
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- 2004
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15. Couples' empathy and sensitive responsiveness to a crying baby simulator.
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Kaźmierczak, Maria, Pawlicka, Paulina, Anikiej-Wiczenbach, Paulina, Łada-Maśko, Ariadna, van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., and Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J.
- Subjects
EMPATHY ,CRYING ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,RESEARCH funding ,SPOUSES ,PARENT-child relationships ,ATTACHMENT behavior ,FAMILIES ,PARENTING ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INFANT care ,SIMULATION methods in education ,CAREGIVERS ,MATHEMATICAL models ,THEORY ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,PARENTAL sensitivity - Abstract
Emotional empathy has been linked to prosocial behaviors and is deemed crucial for parenting and caring for infants. This study examined whether emotional empathy (dispositional and in response to infant crying) is associated with sensitive responsiveness, as observed in 221 heterosexual couples (half of whom were expecting their first child) during a standardized caregiving situation. Simulators resembling real infants were used. Caregiving performed by each partner individually and as a couple was observed using the Ainsworth sensitivity scale. The partners rated their own empathy and their perceived partner's empathy toward the infant simulator. The Polish version of the Interpersonal Reactivity Index was used to measure dispositional emotional empathy (empathic concern, EC; personal distress, PD). Multilevel modeling showed that self-reported and partner-reported empathy elicited by the infant simulator mediated the association between dispositional empathic concern and sensitive responsiveness during caretaking. Women were more empathic and responsive while caring for the infant simulator, and couple sensitive responsiveness was predicted by higher dispositional EC and lower PD in women but not in men. Our findings suggest that dispositional empathy and empathic reactions toward an infant simulator might translate into better adjustment to parenthood and more responsive parenting and coparenting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Attunement between Parents and Professional Caregivers: A Comparison of Childrearing Attitudes in Different Child-Care Settings
- Author
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van Ijzendoorn, Marinus H., Stams, Geert-Jan, Verhoeven, Mieke, and Reiling, Erna
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- 1998
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17. Exploring everyday state attachment dynamics in middle childhood.
- Author
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Verhees, Martine W. F. T., Ceulemans, Eva, Finet, Chloë, van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J., and Bosmans, Guy
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,CAREGIVERS ,LIFE expectancy ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
The current study explored dynamics of secure state attachment expectations in everyday life in middle childhood, specifically state attachment carry-over and reactivity to experiences of caregiver support in the context of stress. In two independent samples (one community sample, N = 123; one adoption sample, N = 69), children (8–12 years) daily reported on their state attachment for respectively 14 and 7 consecutive days. Additionally, they reported daily on their experiences of distress and subsequent experiences of caregiver support. Results in both samples indicated that secure state attachment on a day-to-day basis is characterized by a significant positive carry-over effect, suggesting that state attachment fluctuations are (partially) self-predictive. In Study 1, experiencing no support following distress significantly related to intraindividual decreases in secure state attachment; in Study 2, experiencing effective support during distress related to intra-individual increases in secure state attachment. Taken together, the current studies provide novel and important insights into how state attachment temporally evolves on a day-to-day basis in middle childhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. Attachment representations and autonomic regulation in maltreating and nonmaltreating mothers.
- Author
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REIJMAN, SOPHIE, ALINK, LENNEKE R. A., COMPIER-DE BLOCK, LAURA H. C. G., WERNER, CLAUDIA D., MARAS, ATHANASIOS, RIJNBERK, CORINE, VAN IJZENDOORN, MARINUS H., and BAKERMANS-KRANENBURG, MARIAN J.
- Subjects
ATTACHMENT behavior ,MOTHER-child relationship ,GALVANIC skin response ,VAGAL tone ,CAREGIVERS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This study assessed attachment representation and attachment-related autonomic regulation in a sample of 38 maltreating and 35 nonmaltreating mothers. Mothers' state of mind regarding attachment was measured using the Adult Attachment Interview. They further watched an attachment-based comfort paradigm, during which we measured skin conductance and vagal tone. More maltreating mothers (42%) than nonmaltreating mothers (17%) had an unresolved/disoriented attachment classification. Attachment representation was related to physiology during the comfort paradigm: an unresolved state of mind and a nonautonomous classification were associated with a decrease in skin conductance during the comfort paradigm, specifically during the responsive caregiver scenario. However, physiology did not differ between maltreating and nonmaltreating mothers. The decrease in skin conductance of unresolved mothers during the comfort paradigm might be indicative of a deactivating response, which is congruent with the dissociative nature of the unresolved state of mind. The results point to the potential utility of interventions focused on attachment representations for maltreating mothers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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19. A differential susceptibility analysis reveals the “who and how” about adolescents' responses to preventive interventions: Tests of first- and second-generation Gene × Intervention hypotheses.
- Author
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Belsky, Jay, van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., Brody, Gene H., Yu, Tianyi, and Beach, Steven R. H.
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DISEASE susceptibility , *PREVENTIVE medicine , *DOPAMINE receptors , *AFRICAN Americans , *DRUG utilization , *SYMPTOMS , *CAREGIVERS - Abstract
This study was designed to investigate a genetic moderation effect of dopamine receptor 4 gene (DRD4) alleles that have seven or more repeats (long alleles) on an intervention to deter drug use among rural African American adolescents in high-risk families. Adolescents (N = 291, M age = 17) were assigned randomly to the Adults in the Making (AIM) program or to a control condition and were followed for 27.5 months. Adolescents provided data on drug use and vulnerability cognitions three times after pretest. Pretest assessments of caregiver depressive symptoms, disruption in the home, and support toward the adolescent were used to construct a family risk index. Adolescents living in high-risk families who carried at least one DRD4 long allele and were assigned to the control condition evinced greater escalations in drug use than did (a) adolescents who lived in high-risk families, carried the DRD4 long allele, and were assigned to AIM, or (b) adolescents assigned to either condition who carried no DRD4 long alleles. AIM-induced reductions in vulnerability cognitions were responsible for the Family Risk × AIM × DRD4 status drug use prevention effects. These findings support differential susceptibility predictions and imply that prevention effects on genetically susceptible individuals may be underestimated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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20. Serotonin transporter linked polymorphic region (5-HTTLPR) genotype moderates the longitudinal impact of early caregiving on externalizing behavior.
- Author
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Belsky, Jay, van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., Brett, Zoë H., Humphreys, Kathryn L., Smyke, Anna T., Gleason, Mary Margaret, Nelson, Charles A., Zeanah, Charles H., Fox, Nathan A., and Drury, Stacy S.
- Subjects
- *
SEROTONIN transporters , *GENETIC polymorphisms , *CAREGIVERS , *EXTERNALIZING behavior , *FOSTER home care , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
We examined caregiver report of externalizing behavior from 12 to 54 months of age in 102 children randomized to care as usual in institutions or to newly created high-quality foster care. At baseline no differences by group or genotype in externalizing were found. However, changes in externalizing from baseline to 42 months of age were moderated by the serotonin transporter linked polymorphic region genotype and intervention group, where the slope for short–short (S/S) individuals differed as a function of intervention group. The slope for individuals carrying the long allele did not significantly differ between groups. At 54 months of age, S/S children in the foster care group had the lowest levels of externalizing behavior, while children with the S/S genotype in the care as usual group demonstrated the highest rates of externalizing behavior. No intervention group differences were found in externalizing behavior among children who carried the long allele. These findings, within a randomized controlled trial of foster care compared to continued care as usual, indicate that the serotonin transporter linked polymorphic region genotype moderates the relation between early caregiving environments to predict externalizing behavior in children exposed to early institutional care in a manner most consistent with differential susceptibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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21. III. ATTACHMENT AND EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN INSTITUTIONAL CARE: CHARACTERISTICS AND CATCH UP.
- Author
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Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J., Steele, Howard, Zeanah, Charles H., Muhamedrahimov, Rifkat J., Vorria, Panayiota, Dobrova-Krol, Natasha A., Steele, Miriam, van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., Juffer, Femmie, and Gunnar, Megan R.
- Subjects
ATTACHMENT behavior in children ,BIOMECHANICS ,CAREGIVERS ,CHILD development ,ADULT-child relationships ,INSTITUTIONAL care of children ,EMOTIONS in children ,PSYCHOLOGY ,THEORY - Abstract
Attachment has been assessed in the extreme environment of orphanages, but an important issue to be addressed in this chapter is whether in addition to standard assessment procedures, such as the Strange Situation, the lack of a specific attachment in some institutionalized children should be taken into account given the limits to the development of stable relationships in institutionalized care. In addition, this chapter discusses disinhibited or indiscriminately friendly behavior that is often seen in institutionalized children. Enhanced caregiving quality alone appears to be insufficient to diminish indiscriminate behavior, at least in some children, as evidenced by the persistence of indiscriminate behavior in children adopted out of institutions into adoptive families. We suggest that the etiology and function of indiscriminate, 'friendly' behavior may be different for institutionalized versus not-institutionalized children. In the first case it may reflect a distortion or disruption of early attachment relationships; in the latter case it is likely to result from the lack of expected input in the form of contingent interactions with a stable caregiver in early life. We try to delineate infant and caregiver characteristics that are associated with secure attachment in institutional settings, given the inevitable fact that large numbers of infants worldwide are being raised, and will be raised, in contexts of institutional care. We conclude that much further study is needed of the development of children's attachments following adoption out of an institutional setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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22. The importance of quality of care: effects of perinatal HIV infection and early institutional rearing on preschoolers' attachment and indiscriminate friendliness Natasha A. Dobrova-Krol et al. HIV, institutional care, attachment, indiscriminate friendliness
- Author
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Dobrova‐Krol, Natasha A., Bakermans‐Kranenburg, Marian J., van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., and Juffer, Femmie
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ANALYSIS of variance ,ATTACHMENT behavior ,CAREGIVERS ,CHI-squared test ,CHILD care ,CHILD development ,INSTITUTIONAL care of children ,COMPARATIVE studies ,STATISTICAL correlation ,FRIENDSHIP ,HIV-positive persons ,INTELLIGENCE tests ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL quality control ,SOCIAL skills ,VIDEO recording ,SCALE items ,FAMILY roles ,CONTROL groups ,CHILDREN ,CLASSIFICATION - Abstract
The rearing environment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected children is often compromised, putting these children at additional risks. Positive caregiving may ameliorate the impact of adverse circumstances and promote attachment security. The goal of the present study was to examine the attachment relationships of HIV-infected children in biological families and institutions; to examine the effects of HIV infection and institutional rearing on attachment security and indiscriminate friendliness; and to assess the role of caregiving in the face of HIV-related adversities. We studied 64 Ukrainian uninfected and HIV-infected children reared in families and institutions (mean age 50.9 months). Physical and cognitive development of children as well as attachment-related domains and indiscriminate friendliness were assessed. Institutional care but not the presence of HIV was associated with lower levels of attachment security and higher levels of indiscriminate friendliness. On average, the level of indiscriminate friendliness among institution-reared children was more than twice as high as among family-reared children. Only 24% of institution-reared children had clearly developed attachment patterns, as opposed to 97% among family-reared children. Controlling for physical and cognitive development, type of care (institution or family), and HIV status, positive caregiving was associated with higher levels of attachment security. Indiscriminate friendliness was associated with lower levels of attachment security among family-reared children, but with higher levels of positive caregiving among institution-reared children. Etiology and function of indiscriminate friendliness may differ for family-reared versus institution-reared children. The findings of this study suggest the necessity of early interventions improving the quality of care for HIV-infected children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Children's Attachment Relationships with Day Care Caregivers: Associations with Positive Caregiving and the Child's Temperament.
- Author
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De Schipper, J. Clasien, Tavecchio, Louis W. C., and Van IJzendoorn, Marinus H.
- Subjects
ATTACHMENT behavior in children ,CHILD care workers ,CAREGIVERS ,ATTACHMENT behavior ,EMOTIONS in children ,IRRITABILITY (Psychology) - Abstract
In this study, children's attachment relationships with their professional caregivers in center day care were observed for 48 children. We explored whether more positive caregiving was associated with a more secure attachment relationship and whether this association was stronger for more temperamentally irritable children compared to less irritable children. Trained observers coded the attachment relationship in the day care setting using the attachment Q-sort. The observational record of the caregiving environment was used to assess children's individual experience of positive caregiver–child interaction in the classroom. When caregivers showed more frequent positive caregiving behavior, children showed more secure attachment behavior toward their primary professional caregiver. Temperament was not related to attachment security, nor did it serve as a moderator. Consequently, no support for Belsky's susceptibility hypothesis was found. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The First 20,000 Strange Situation Procedures: A Meta-Analytic Review.
- Author
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Madigan, Sheri, Fearon, R. M. Pasco, van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., Duschinsky, Robbie, Schuengel, Carlo, Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J., Ly, Anh, Cooke, Jessica E., Deneault, Audrey-Ann, Oosterman, Mirjam, and Verhage, Marije L.
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INSTITUTIONAL care of children , *FOSTER children , *AGE differences , *ADOPTIVE parents , *CHILD abuse , *CAREGIVERS , *PLACE attachment (Psychology) , *PARENT-infant relationships - Abstract
The Strange Situation Procedure (SSP) was developed five decades ago to assess infant–parent attachment relationships. Although the procedure itself has remained relatively constant in over 285 studies (20,720 dyads) conducted to date, there have been vast sociological changes during this time, and research foci shifts to studying diverse populations. Since its inception, the SSP has also been adopted in over 20 countries. In this meta-analysis, we collate this large body of work, with the objectives of producing reliable estimates of the distribution of the four SSP attachment classifications, assessing temporal trends and geographical differences, and determining if and when distributions are different across various populations. Results revealed that the global distribution of SSP attachment was 51.6% secure, 14.7% avoidant, 10.2% resistant, and 23.5% disorganized. There were no differences in the distribution among mothers and fathers, and no child age or sex differences. We found a temporal trend in which there was less avoidant attachment over time and there were attachment distribution differences between samples from North America versus other regions of the world, particularly Asia, Middle East/Israel and South America. We found higher rates of avoidant and disorganized attachment in populations with sociodemographic risks and higher rates of disorganized attachment in samples where parents had psychopathology and when the child experienced maltreatment or was adopted from foster or institutional care. The implications of these findings for future research and practice are discussed. Public Significance Statement: This meta-analysis suggests that, worldwide, one in every two infants develops a secure attachment relationship with their caregiver. Secure attachment is more likely to develop when fewer stressors are imposed on the parent–infant dyad. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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25. Quality of Center Day Care and Attunement Between Parents and Caregivers: Center Day Care in...
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van Ijzendoorn, Marinus H. and Tevecchio, Louis W. C.
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CAREGIVERS , *DAY care centers - Abstract
Provides information on a study on the quality of care at day-care centers in European and North American countries. Methodology; Results of the study; Conclusions.
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- 1998
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26. Attunement Between Parents and Professional Caregivers: A Comparison of a Childrearing Attitudes in Different Child-Care Settings.
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Van Ijzendoorn, Marinus H., Tavecchio, Louis W. C., Stams, Geert-Jan, Verhoeven, Mieke, and Reiling, Erna
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SURVEYS ,CAREGIVERS ,CHILD care ,CHILD rearing ,PARENTS - Abstract
In a survey of a national sample (n = 568 children) of parents and nonparental caregivers from four types of child care--day care, after-school care, family day care, and babysitter care--we studied the attunement of childrearing attitudes between parents and nonparental caregivers and perceptions of their relationships to one another and to the child from an ecological systems perspective. Parents within the same family were rather consistent in their childrearing attitudes and beliefs, but we found some discontinuities between parents and professional caregivers in their childrearing attitudes and perceptions of the quality of the child-caregiver relationship. Lack of attunement in authoritarian control and support was associated with a lower degree of child well-being. Better communication between parents and caregivers was associated with greater attunement and with a higher degree of child well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
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- View/download PDF
27. Maternal and Paternal Sensitivity: Key Determinants of Child Attachment Security Examined Through Meta-Analysis.
- Author
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Madigan, Sheri, Deneault, Audrey-Ann, Duschinsky, Robbie, Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J., Schuengel, Carlo, van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., Ly, Anh, Fearon, R. M. Pasco, Eirich, Rachel, and Verhage, Marije L.
- Subjects
- *
PARENTAL sensitivity , *PARENT-child relationships , *CAREGIVERS , *FATHERS , *CHILD development , *CHILD care , *CHILD behavior - Abstract
Sensitive caregiving behavior, which involves the ability to notice, interpret, and quickly respond to a child's signals of need and/or interest, is a central determinant of secure child–caregiver attachment. Yet, significant heterogeneity in effect sizes exists across the literature, and sources of heterogeneity have yet to be explained. For all child–caregiver dyads, there was a significant and positive pooled association between caregiver sensitivity and parent–child attachment (r =.25, 95% CI [.22,.28], k = 174, 230 effect sizes, N = 22,914). We also found a positive association between maternal sensitivity and child attachment security (r =.26, 95% CI [.22,.29], k = 159, 202 effect sizes, N = 21,483), which was equivalent in magnitude to paternal sensitivity and child attachment security (r =.21, 95% CI [.14, 27], k = 22, 23 effect sizes, N = 1,626). Maternal sensitivity was also negatively associated with all three classifications of insecure attachment (avoidant: k = 43, r = −.24 [−.34, −.13]; resistant: k = 43, r = −.12 [−.19, −.06]; disorganized: k = 24, r = −.19 [−.27, −.11]). For maternal sensitivity, associations were larger in studies that used the Attachment Q-Sort (vs. the Strange Situation), used the Maternal Behavior Q-Sort (vs. Ainsworth or Emotional Availability Scales), had strong (vs. poor) interrater measurement reliability, had a longer observation of sensitivity, and had less time elapse between assessments. For paternal sensitivity, associations were larger in older (vs. younger) fathers and children. These findings confirm the importance of both maternal and paternal sensitivity for the development of child attachment security and add understanding of the methodological and substantive factors that allow this effect to be observed. Public Significance Statement: The quality of care children receive from caregivers can shape the foundations of a thriving society. Sensitive caregiver behavior involves the ability to notice, interpret, and quickly respond to a child's signals of need and/or interest. Findings from our research suggests that caregivers' sensitive behavior toward their child plays a pivotal role in fostering children's secure attachment. We found that associations were similar for both mothers and fathers. These findings stress the urgency of allocating resources and supports to enhance sensitive caregiver behavior, to in turn promote healthier child–parent relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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28. Genetic mechanisms of parenting.
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Mileva-Seitz, Viara R., Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J., and van IJzendoorn, Marinus H.
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PARENTING , *EPIGENETICS , *MATERNAL health services , *BRAIN physiology , *GENOTYPE-environment interaction , *CAREGIVERS - Abstract
This article is part of a Special Issue “Parental Care”. The complexities of parenting behavior in humans have been studied for decades. Only recently did we begin to probe the genetic and epigenetic mechanisms underlying these complexities. Much of the research in this field continues to be informed by animal studies, where genetic manipulations and invasive tools allow to peek into and directly observe the brain during the expression of maternal behavior. In humans, studies of adult twins who are parents can suggest dimensions of parenting that might be more amenable to a genetic influence. Candidate gene studies can test specific genes in association with parental behavior based on prior knowledge of those genes' function. Gene-by-environment interactions of a specific kind indicating differential susceptibility to the environment might explain why some parents are more resilient and others are more vulnerable to stressful life events. Epigenetic studies can provide the bridge often necessary to explain why some individuals behave differently from others despite common genetic influences. There is a much-needed expansion in parenting research to include not only mothers as the focus—as has been the case almost exclusively to date—but also fathers, grandparents, and other caregivers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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29. Reading the mind in the infant eyes: Paradoxical effects of oxytocin on neural activity and emotion recognition in watching pictures of infant faces.
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Voorthuis, Alexandra, Riem, Madelon M.E., Van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., and Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J.
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INFANT psychology , *OXYTOCIN , *EMOTIONS , *NEUROPEPTIDES , *CAREGIVERS , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
The neuropeptide oxytocin facilitates parental caregiving and is involved in the processing of infant vocal cues. In this randomized-controlled trial with functional magnetic resonance imaging we examined the influence of intranasally administered oxytocin on neural activity during emotion recognition in infant faces. Blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) responses during emotion recognition were measured in 50 women who were administered 16 IU of oxytocin or a placebo. Participants performed an adapted version of the Infant Facial Expressions of Emotions from Looking at Pictures (IFEEL pictures), a task that has been developed to assess the perception and interpretation of infants' facial expressions. Experimentally induced oxytocin levels increased activation in the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), the middle temporal gyrus (MTG) and the superior temporal gyrus (STG). However, oxytocin decreased performance on the IFEEL picture task. Our findings suggest that oxytocin enhances processing of facial cues of the emotional state of infants on a neural level, but at the same time it may decrease the correct interpretation of infants' facial expressions on a behavior level. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Oxytocin and Social Behav . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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30. Caregivers’ cortisol levels and perceived stress in home-based and center-based childcare
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Groeneveld, Marleen G., Vermeer, Harriet J., van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., and Linting, Mariëlle
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CHILD care , *STRESS in children , *CAREGIVERS , *HYDROCORTISONE , *SECRETION , *CHILD development - Abstract
Abstract: The current study examined professional caregivers’ perceived and physiological stress, and associations with the quality of care they provide. Participants were 55 female caregivers from childcare homes and 46 female caregivers from childcare centers in the Netherlands. In both types of settings, equivalent measures and procedures were used. On non-work days, caregivers’ salivary cortisol levels decreased between 11am and 3pm, whereas on work days, caregivers’ cortisol levels remained at the same level during this period. Caregivers’ cortisol levels and perceived stress did not differ across the two types of settings. In home-based childcare, caregivers offered higher-quality caregiving, compared to caregivers in center-based childcare. In home-based childcare – but not in center care – caregivers’ negative appraisal was associated with less positive caregiver behavior. These findings suggest that work at childcare influences cortisol secretion in professional caregivers, and that perceived stress but not cortisol is associated with quality of care. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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31. Goodness-of-fit in center day care: relations of temperament, stability, and quality of care with the child’s adjustment
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De Schipper, J. Clasien, Tavecchio, Louis W.C., Van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., and Van Zeijl, Jantien
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CHILD development , *CAREGIVERS , *MENTAL health , *COLLEGE teachers - Abstract
In this study, the concept of ‘goodness-of-fit’ between the child’s temperament and the environment, introduced by Thomas and Chess [Temperament and Development, Brunner/Mazel, New York, 1977], is applied within the setting of center day care. Mothers and primary professional caregivers of 186 children, aged 6–30 months, participated in this study. The child’s problem behaviors were assessed with the CBCL Teacher Report Form [Achenbach, T.M., Guide for the Caregiver–Teacher Report Form for Ages 2–5, Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, 1997]. The child’s socio-emotional well-being in day care was measured with the Leiden Inventory for the Child’s Well-Being in Day Care. The Infant Characteristics Questionnaire measured the child’s temperament. Children with an easier temperament showed less internalizing and total problem behavior and more well-being. The results suggest that for children with a more difficult temperament, several parallel care arrangements interfere with the process of adapting to the day care setting. Also, our results indicate that in the group of children with greater availability of trusted caregivers, a more easy-going temperament was associated with more well-being. The association between temperament and well-being was not found in the group of children with less access to trusted caregivers. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2004
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32. Consensus statement on group care for children and adolescents: A statement of policy of the American Orthopsychiatric Association.
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Dozier, Mary, Kaufman, Joan, Kobak, Roger, O'Connor, Thomas G., Sagi-Schwartz, Abraham, Scott, Stephen, Shauffer, Carole, Smetana, Judith, van IJzendoorn, Marinus H., and Zeanah, Charles H.
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CHILD care , *CAREGIVERS , *MENTAL health services , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Group care for children and adolescents is widely used as a rearing environment and sometimes used as a setting in which intensive services can be provided. This consensus statement on group care affirms that children and adolescents have the need and right to grow up in a family with at least 1 committed, stable, and loving adult caregiver. In principle, group care should never be favored over family care. Group care should be used only when it is the least detrimental alternative, when necessary therapeutic mental health services cannot be delivered in a less restrictive setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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