Mark Wade1, Charles H Zeanah2, Nathan A Fox3, Charles A Nelson4,5. 1. Department of Applied Psychology and Human Development, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada. 2. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA, USA. 3. Department of Human Development and Quantitative Methodology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA. 4. Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA. 5. Harvard Graduate School of Education, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Children reared in institutions experience profound deprivation that is linked to impairments in social communication (SC). However, little is known about the long-term consequences of institutional rearing on SC through adolescence, and how SC deficits relate to broad-spectrum psychopathology. It is also unclear whether early removal from deprivation and placement into socially enriched environments remediates these difficulties. METHODS:Children reared in Romanian institutions from the Bucharest Early Intervention Project were randomly assigned to care as usual or foster care intervention in early childhood. An age- and sex-matched group of never-institutionalized children was also recruited. SC data from 208 children at age 8 and 129 children at 16 were collected using the Social Communication Questionnaire. Psychopathology was assessed as saved factor scores for general (P) and specific internalizing (INT) and externalizing (EXT) problems. We examined (a) whether institutional rearing is associated with continued SC deficits into adolescence; (b) whether early placement into foster care mitigates risk for SC problems; and (c) associations between SC and psychopathology from middle childhood (age 8) to adolescence (age 16). RESULTS: Findings suggest that: (a) institutionally-reared children have significantly more SC problems than never-institutionalized children at age 16; (b) children placed into foster care early in life have fewer problems with reciprocal social interaction compared to those with prolonged institutional rearing; and (c) deficits in SC at age 8 partially account for the link between institutional rearing and general psychopathology at age 16. CONCLUSIONS: Early deprivation is associated with impairments in SC that persist into adolescence, with evidence for the remedial benefit of family-based care in the domain of reciprocal social interaction. Moreover, deficits in SC among ever-institutionalized children in middle childhood may increase the risk of broad-spectrum psychopathology in adolescence, thus providing one putative target for early intervention to safeguard against later psychiatric problems.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND:Children reared in institutions experience profound deprivation that is linked to impairments in social communication (SC). However, little is known about the long-term consequences of institutional rearing on SC through adolescence, and how SC deficits relate to broad-spectrum psychopathology. It is also unclear whether early removal from deprivation and placement into socially enriched environments remediates these difficulties. METHODS:Children reared in Romanian institutions from the Bucharest Early Intervention Project were randomly assigned to care as usual or foster care intervention in early childhood. An age- and sex-matched group of never-institutionalized children was also recruited. SC data from 208 children at age 8 and 129 children at 16 were collected using the Social Communication Questionnaire. Psychopathology was assessed as saved factor scores for general (P) and specific internalizing (INT) and externalizing (EXT) problems. We examined (a) whether institutional rearing is associated with continued SC deficits into adolescence; (b) whether early placement into foster care mitigates risk for SC problems; and (c) associations between SC and psychopathology from middle childhood (age 8) to adolescence (age 16). RESULTS: Findings suggest that: (a) institutionally-reared children have significantly more SC problems than never-institutionalized children at age 16; (b) children placed into foster care early in life have fewer problems with reciprocal social interaction compared to those with prolonged institutional rearing; and (c) deficits in SC at age 8 partially account for the link between institutional rearing and general psychopathology at age 16. CONCLUSIONS: Early deprivation is associated with impairments in SC that persist into adolescence, with evidence for the remedial benefit of family-based care in the domain of reciprocal social interaction. Moreover, deficits in SC among ever-institutionalized children in middle childhood may increase the risk of broad-spectrum psychopathology in adolescence, thus providing one putative target for early intervention to safeguard against later psychiatric problems.
Authors: Robert Kumsta; Jana Kreppner; Michael Rutter; Celia Beckett; Jennifer Castle; Suzanne Stevens; Edmund J Sonuga-Barke Journal: Monogr Soc Res Child Dev Date: 2010-04
Authors: Edmund J S Sonuga-Barke; Mark Kennedy; Robert Kumsta; Nicky Knights; Dennis Golm; Michael Rutter; Barbara Maughan; Wolff Schlotz; Jana Kreppner Journal: Lancet Date: 2017-02-23 Impact factor: 79.321
Authors: Mark Wade; Jill Parsons; Kathryn L Humphreys; Katie A McLaughlin; Margaret A Sheridan; Charles H Zeanah; Charles A Nelson; Nathan A Fox Journal: Child Dev Perspect Date: 2022-07-13