Literature DB >> 15056316

Institutional care: associations between overactivity and lack of selectivity in social relationships.

Penny Roy1, Michael Rutter, Andrew Pickles.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The behaviour of children raised in institutional care in their early years is typified by heightened levels of inattention and overactivity irrespective of the quality of the care. There is some evidence that this behaviour may be specifically associated with forms of attachment disorder behaviours, but to date studies have been restricted to institutions characterised by high levels of malnutrition and lack of active experiences.
METHODS: Nineteen primary school age children admitted to good quality residential group care before the age of 1 year were compared with 19 children of the same gender reared in a foster family from the same age. A combination of observational, questionnaire, interview and psychometric measures was employed.
RESULTS: A fifth of the institutional children but none of the foster-family children showed a marked lack of selective attachment relationships with their caregivers. The same proportions were found for a lack of selectivity in friendships with their peers but the children showing these features were not identical. A lack of selectivity in relationships was strongly associated with inattention/overactivity, both as observed and reported. The pattern of a marked lack of selectivity and inattention/overactivity was evident only in the boys in the institution-reared group.
CONCLUSIONS: It is concluded that the pattern represents a relatively specific response to some feature of an institutional rearing; nevertheless, it occurred in only just over a third of the institutional children, so that it is a far from universal consequence.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15056316     DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-7610.2004.00278.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry        ISSN: 0021-9630            Impact factor:   8.982


  28 in total

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8.  The course of early disinhibited social engagement among post-institutionalized adopted children.

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9.  Early social deprivation and the social buffering of cortisol stress responses in late childhood: An experimental study.

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10.  Effects of early intervention and the moderating effects of brain activity on institutionalized children's social skills at age 8.

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