Literature DB >> 3360029

Are early childhood experiences overrated? A reassessment of maternal deprivation.

C Ernst1.   

Abstract

The opinion that early maternal deprivation (absence of mother, lack of stimulation, multiple caregivers) results in lasting damage to intellectual and emotional development is generally accepted. In a real-time longitudinal study 137 children, part of a representative sample of Kt. Zürich (Switzerland) who spent the first years in residential nurseries, were investigated at age 12.6 +/- 8 months and again at age 14 years. In IQ and education this group at follow-up was not different from the general population. The children were no less popular than a control group of classmates. There were, however, among them two to three times more psychiatric cases than among a Swiss comparison group. Behavioral and emotional disorders were not connected with status at first examination or variables of the early environment, but with psychosocial risk factors in the environment the children lived in after leaving the nurseries: parental discord, divorce, psychosocial disorder in parents, presence of step family, abuse. This finding is confirmed by other prospective and retrospective studies. Early deprivation is almost always an indicator that an unfavorable situation will continue throughout childhood. If, on the other hand, the environment changes completely, as it does after adoption, early deprivation by itself does not appear as a risk factor. The role of the mother-child relationship and of early influences in general on personality ought to be reconsidered.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3360029     DOI: 10.1007/bf00382371

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Arch Psychiatry Neurol Sci        ISSN: 0175-758X


  17 in total

1.  The infantile disorders of hospitalism and anaclitic depression.

Authors:  S R PINNEAU
Journal:  Psychol Bull       Date:  1955-09       Impact factor: 17.737

2.  Separation experiences and mental health; a statistical study.

Authors:  J G HOWELLS; J LAYNG
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1955-08-06       Impact factor: 79.321

3.  Hospitalism; a follow-up report.

Authors:  R A SPITZ
Journal:  Psychoanal Study Child       Date:  1946

4.  Anaclitic depression; an inquiry into the genesis of psychiatric conditions in early childhood.

Authors:  R A SPITZ
Journal:  Psychoanal Study Child       Date:  1946

5.  Maternal care and mental health.

Authors:  J BOWLBY
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  1951       Impact factor: 9.408

6.  Variations in adolescent adjustment of institutionally-reared children.

Authors:  W GOLDFARB
Journal:  Am J Orthopsychiatry       Date:  1947-07

7.  The making and breaking of affectional bonds. I. Aetiology and psychopathology in the light of attachment theory. An expanded version of the Fiftieth Maudsley Lecture, delivered before the Royal College of Psychiatrists, 19 November 1976.

Authors:  J Bowlby
Journal:  Br J Psychiatry       Date:  1977-03       Impact factor: 9.319

8.  [Genetic, medical and psychosocial factors in learning disorders in a cohort of 11-year-old children (Winterthur study)].

Authors:  W Schmid; A Bächler; D Frey; J H Gerth; J Prim; A Hänseler; T Augsburger
Journal:  Acta Paedopsychiatr       Date:  1983-05

9.  The effect of early institutional rearing on the development of eight year old children.

Authors:  B Tizard; J Hodges
Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry       Date:  1978-04       Impact factor: 8.982

10.  Psychosocial factors and depressive symptoms.

Authors:  M K O'Neil; W J Lancee; S J Freeman
Journal:  J Nerv Ment Dis       Date:  1986-01       Impact factor: 2.254

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