Literature DB >> 18516307

Identification and classification of childhood developmental difficulties in the context of attachment relationships.

Catherine Ann Cameron1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This paper addresses challenges in identification and classification of childhood difficulties in the context of the current psychological literature on early attachment relations and normative development.
METHOD: A review of the literature on childhood development and attachment relationships was conducted in relation to recent advances in developmental psychology.
RESULTS: Findings include recommendations for studying the child in ecological context, focusing on positive assets and resiliency, and seeing children as active participants in the construction of their own environmental niches. Studying the active strong child in context involves taking an integrative view by investigating the interactions of all basic biopsychosocial facets of the child's world, recognizing the delicate balance between pathologizing and insisting that all behaviour and psychological states are equally valid expressions of a normative developmental course. Further, developmental science now has amassed the requisite data to establish the need for taking attachment relationships into careful account in assessing a child or youth's biopsychosocial wellbeing.
CONCLUSIONS: It is thus argued here that identification of children in psychological distress requires an holistic, contextually inclusive, examination of their early and subsequent attachment experiences and positive relations if a diagnosis is to lead to appropriate, efficacious, intervention.

Entities:  

Keywords:  attachment; classification; developmental difficulties; resilience

Year:  2008        PMID: 18516307      PMCID: PMC2387106     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Can Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry        ISSN: 1719-8429


  17 in total

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Authors:  C Caldji; J Diorio; M J Meaney
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2000-12-15       Impact factor: 13.382

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Review 3.  Psychobiology of persistent antisocial behavior: stress, early vulnerabilities and the attenuation hypothesis.

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Journal:  J Consult Clin Psychol       Date:  1996-02

Review 6.  Early determinants of behaviour: evidence from primate studies.

Authors:  S J Suomi
Journal:  Br Med Bull       Date:  1997-01       Impact factor: 4.291

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Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  1972-12

8.  Salivary cortisol and cardiovascular activity during stress in oppositional-defiant disorder boys and normal controls.

Authors:  S H van Goozen; W Matthys; P T Cohen-Kettenis; C Gispen-de Wied; V M Wiegant; H van Engeland
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry       Date:  1998-04-01       Impact factor: 13.382

9.  Brain plasticity and recovery from early cortical injury.

Authors:  Bryan Kolb; Robbin Gibb
Journal:  Dev Psychobiol       Date:  2007-03       Impact factor: 3.038

10.  Guided participation in cultural activity by toddlers and caregivers.

Authors:  B Rogoff; J Mistry; A Göncü; C Mosier
Journal:  Monogr Soc Res Child Dev       Date:  1993
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