deprivation and institutionalisation

Cards (18)

  • separation is absence of caregiver for shorter periods, unlikely to cause psychological harm, unless it is regular and child won't form attachment
  • deprivation is long/permanent loss of something needed, attachment is formed and lost
  • deprivation affects child
    inability to form lasting relationships later
    causes affectionless psychopathy, inability to feel remorse
    delinquency, behavioural problem in adolescence
    problems with cognitive development
  • Bowlby 44 juvenile thieves procedure
    aim to gain understanding of effect of maternal deprivation
    case study on background of 44 adolescents who were referred to delinquency clinic for stealing, group compared to 44 delinquents who were not thieves
    data collected using interviews and questionnaires
  • bowlby 44 juvenile thieves results
    17 of the thieves experienced frequent separation from mother before age 2
    14 of these diagnosed with affectionless psychopathy
    deprivation has long term consequences, harmful
  • bowlby study evaluation
    case study so in depth qualitative data
    small sample size so cannot generalise
    retrospective data in unreliable, inaccurate
    affectionless psychopathy may be due to biology, social class
  • maternal deprivation theory evaluation
    RWA bowlby impacted child rearing practices, visiting times in hospital
    socially sensitive
    supporting research of czech twins
  • czech twins study- koluchova 1976
    mother died soon after birth
    father remarried, cruel stepmother locked in cellar
    beaten and had no toys from 18 months to 7 years of age
    at age 7 had little social and intellectual development but made progress and had above average intelligence and good social relationships
  • institution conditions
    filthy, dark, overcrowded, poor hygiene
    deprived of basic human rights
    difficult to adapt to normal life even after being adopted
  • institutionalisation
    particular place dedicated to particular task
    orphanages where children are orphans or waiting for adoption
  • privation
    child who has never had attachment to its mother or caregiver
  • bucharest early intervention Zeenan et al 2005 procedure
    sample approximately of 100 children, 12-31 months
    90% spent most of life in orphanage compared to control who were never institutionalised
    used strange situation to measure attachment type
  • bucharest early intervention zeenan et al 2005
    74% of control secure
    19% of institutionalised secure
    65% of institutionalised disinhibited
  • Rutter et Al 2011
    165 Romanian orphans adopted by british families compared to 52 UK adoptees
    longitudinal study at ages 4, 6, 11
  • rutter et al results
    when adopted before 6mths, 102 IQ and normal social development
    when adopted 6mths-2yrs, 82 IQ and disinhibited attachment
    when adopted 2 years +, 77 IQ
    correlation between time institutionalised and development
    can develop normally if before 6 months
  • disinhibited attachment
    clingy, attention seeking, no discrimination between familiar and unfamiliar
  • rutter et al 2011 evaluation
    longitudinal so in depth but drop outs
    correlation not causation
    low population validity as smaller Romanian sample than UK
    RWA several staff doing handover means attachment cannot form, fewer consistent caregivers
  • Hodges and Tizard 1989
    longitudinal study- 65 children in residential nursery before 4 months
    did not form attachment
    adopted by 4 years: strong family and peer relationship
    stay in nursery: weak family and peer relationship
    children can recover from institutionalisation if in loving environment before 6 months, social development may not be as good as those who have never suffered privation