Rutter et al, English and Romanian adoptee study (ERA) (procedure)
The researchers have followed a group of 165 Romanian orphans who experienced very poor conditions before being adopted in the UK
This longitudinal study has tested the extent to which good care can make up for poor early experiences in institutions
Physical, cognitive and emotional development has been assessed at 4, 6, 11, 15 and 22-25 years
The study also followed a control group of 52 adopted children from the UK
Rutter et al, English and Romanian adoptee study (ERA) (findings/conclusions) - intellectual development
1/2 of the orphans showed delayed intellectual development when they came to the UK
at age 11, recovery rates were related to their age at adoption
Those adopted before 6 months = mean IQ of 102
Those adopted after 2 years = mean IQ of 77
Beckett et al = those differences continued to be apparent at age 16
Rutter et al, English and Romanian adoptee study (ERA) (findings/conclusions) - disinhibited attachment
Frequency of disinhibited attachment related to the age at adoption
Apparent in children adopted after they were 6 months old = clinginess, attention-seeking and indiscriminate affection to strangers
adopted before 6 months = disinhibited attachment rare
Rutter et al, English and Romanian adoptee study (ERA) (findings/conclusions) - sensitive period
These findings support Bowlby’s view that there is a sensitive period in the development of attachments
A failure to form an attachment before the age of 6 months (and after the age of 2 years) appears to have long-lasting effects
Zeenah et al, Bucharest early intervention project (BEI)
Procedure:
The researchers used the strange situation to assess attachment in 95 Romanian children (aged 12-31 months) who has spent most of their lives in institutional car
They were compared to a control group of 50 children who had never experienced institutional care
Findings/conclusions:
Only 19% of the institutionalised group were securely attached
74% of the controls
44% of the institutionalised group had characteristics of disinhibited attachment
20% of the controls
effects of institutionalisation
Disinhibited attachment:
such children tend to be equally friendly and affectionate towards people they know well or total strangers
This may be an adaptation to multiple caregivers
Damage to intellectual development:
Institutionalised children often show signs of intellectual disability
This effect is not as pronounced if the children are adopted before 6 months of age
strength = Romanian orphans study has RWA
Langton =results from this research have led to improvements in the way children are cared for in institutions
Children’s homes now avoid having large numbers of caregivers for each child
They have 1 or 2 ‘key workers‘ who play a central role
this means children in institutional care have a chance to develop normal attachments and disinhibited attachment is avoided
strength = fewer confounding variables than other research
There were many orphan studies before the Romanian orphans became available to the study
These often involved children who experienced loss or trauma before they were institutionalised
Neglect, abuse and bereavement meant it was hard to observe the effects of institutionalisation in isolation
The children were affected by multiple factors functioning as confounding variables
This means we can be fairly sure that differences in institutionally-cared-for children are the result of this type of care (high internal validity)
counterpoint to fewer confounding variables
Romanian orphan studies may have new confounding variables because quality of care was so poor
Making it hard to separate effects of institutional care from those of poor institutional care
This means that internal validity might not be better than in previous studies after all
limitation = lack of data on adult development
It is too soon to say for certain whether children suffered permanent effects because we only have data on their development as far as their early twenties
It will be some time before we have information about some key research questions
Eg = orphans‘ ability to form and maintain romantic and parenting relationships
this means the Romanian orphan studies have not yet yielded their most important findings, some children may ‘catch up’
extra evaluation = social sensitivity
Late-adopted children were shown to have low IQ = this might subsequently affect how they are treated by parents, teachers etc and might create a self-fulfilling prophecy
BUT = much has been learned from the Romanian orphan studies that might benefit future institutionalised or potentially institutionalised children
So the potential benefits of the studies probably outweigh their social sensitivity