Title: The importance of parenting in the development of disorganized attachment: evidence from a preventive intervention study in adoptive families
Abstract: Background: As infant disorganized attachment is a serious risk factor for later child psychopathology, it is important to examine whether attachment disorganization can be prevented or reduced. Method: In a randomized intervention study involving 130 families with 6‐month‐old adopted infants, two attachment‐based intervention programs were tested. In the first program, mothers were provided a personal book, and in the second program mothers received the same personal book and three home‐based sessions of video feedback. The third group did not receive intervention (control group). Results: The intervention with video feedback and the personal book resulted in enhanced maternal sensitive responsiveness ( d = .65). Children of mothers who received this intervention were less likely to be classified as disorganized attached at the age of 12 months ( d = .46), and received lower scores on the rating scale for disorganization than children in the control group ( d = .62). In the book‐only intervention group children showed lower disorganization ratings compared to the control group, but no effect on the number of infants with disorganized attachment classifications was found. Conclusion: Our short‐term preventive intervention program with video feedback and a book lowered the rate of disorganized attachment. The effectiveness of our intervention documents the importance of parenting in the development of infant attachment disorganization.
Publication Year: 2004
Publication Date: 2004-10-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref', 'pubmed']
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Cited By Count: 250
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