Findings- when arrived in UK, half adoptees showed signs of delayed intellectual development and majority severely undernourished.
At ages of 11- different rates of recovery
Mean IQ of these adopted before 6 months was 102, compared with 86 for thise adopted between 6 months and 2, and 77 for those adopted after 2.
Differences remained at age 16.
Disinhibited attachment- adopted after 6 months, attention- seeking, clinginess and social behaviour directed indiscriminately towards all adults, both familiar and unfamiliar.
Rutter
Procedure- followed a group of 165 Romanian orphans for many years as part of English and Romanian adoptees (ERA) study.
Aim was to investigate the extent to which good care could make up for poorly early experiences in institutions.
Assessed at ages: 4, 6, 11, 15 and 22-25
A group of 52 children for the UK adopted around Same time served as a control group.
Zeanah
Procedure- Bucharest early intervention (BEI) project, assessing attachment in 95 Romanian children aged 12-31 months who spent most lives in institutional care.
Compared to control group of 50 children who had never lived in institution
Measured using SS
Zeanah
Findings- found 74% of control group classed as securely attached
Only 19% of institutional group are securely attached.
Disinhibited attachment applied to 44% of institutionalised children as opposed to less than 20% of the controls
Effects of institutionalisation:
Disinhibited attachment- being equally friendly and affectionate towards familiar people and strangers- unusual as in second year usually show stranger anxiety
Rutter- explained it as an adaption to living with multiple caregivers during sensitive period- child might not have spent enough time with a carer to be able to form a secure attachment
Effects of institutionalisation:
Intellectual disability- most adoptees from before 6 months caught uo with control group by age of 4
Can be recovered provided adoption takes place before the age of 6 months
Stength: Real-world application
Application to improve conditions for children growing up outside their family home
Improvement in conditions experienced by children growing up in the care system
E.g. children's homes now avoid having large numbers of caregivers for each child- two or more 'key workers'
Means that children in institutional care have a chance to develop normal attachments and disinhibited attachment is avoided.
Strength: Fewer confounding variables
Lack of confounding variables
Many orphan studies before Romanian orphans (ww2)- many having trauma and difficult to disentangle effecta of neglect, physical abuse.
But- Romanian orphans had been handed over by loving parent who could not afford to keep them
Means results were much less likely to be confounded by other negatives early experiences (higher internal validity)
Counterpoint to fewer confounding variables:
Studying children from Romanian orphanages might have introduced different confounding variables- conditions remarkably poor, very little intellectual stimulation or comfort
Means harmful effects seen in studies of Romanian orphans may represent the effects of poor institutional care
Limitation: Lack of adult data
Current lack of data on adult development
Latest data early to mid 20s- no data on long term effects of early institutional care
Lifetime prevalence of mental health problems? Ppts successful in forming and maintaining adult romantic and parental relationships?
Longitudinal study- will time time for data
Means it will be some time before we know more completely what the long-term effects are for Romanian orphans