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Sara enjoys a loving relationship with her parents ... Th

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Title: Sara enjoys a loving relationship with her parents ... Th


1
Considering Attachment inthe Context of Adoption
and Foster Care
  • Douglas Goldsmith, Ph.D.
  • Executive Director
  • The Childrens Center

2
Special Thanks
  • Dr. David Oppenheim
  • University of Haifa
  • Dr. Janine Wanlass
  • Westminster College
  • For their contributions and support on
    conceptualizing issues around attachment and
    permanency

3
Overview
  • Attachment Theory
  • Internal Working Models
  • Reflective Functioning
  • Insightfulness
  • Application to Permanency
  • The Attachment Toolbox

4
Understanding Attachment
5
Attachment
  • Emotional bond with another person
  • Behaviors promote proximity with one perceived as
    older, stronger, and wiser
  • Motivational system to seek proximity
  • Enhances feelings of security
  • Motivates baby to take action when frightened

6
Attachment Theory
  • When I am close to my loved one I feel good, when
    I am far away I am anxious, sad or lonely
  • Attachment is mediated by looking, hearing, and
    holding
  • When Im held I feel warm, safe, and comforted
  • Results in a relaxed state so that one can,
    again, begin to explore

    Holmes (1993)

7
Attachment in Action
  • Behaviors shown by careseeker and caregiver
  • Aware of and seek each other out if careseeker is
    in danger due to physical separation, illness, or
    fright

8
Secure Attachment
  • The caregiver is perceived as a reliable source
    of protection and comfort

9
Cooper, Hoffman, Marvin Powell , 2000
10
Attachment Classifications
  • The strange situation
  • Secure 65
  • Avoidant 20
  • Ambivalent 10
  • Disorganized 5-10 (80 maltreated)

11
Secure (B)
  • Uses mother as secure base
  • Signs of missing mother
  • Actively greets with smile or gesture
  • Signals or seeks contact if upset
  • Once comforted resumes exploration
  • Solomon George (1999) p.291

12
Secure Attachment
  • Attachment is mediated by looking, hearing and
    holding the sight of my loved one lifts my
    soul, the sound of her approach awakes pleasant
    anticipation. To be held and to feel her skin
    against mine makes me feel warm, safe and
    comforted.

  • Holmes (1993)

13
Avoidant (A)
  • Explores readily
  • Little visible distress when left alone
  • Upon reunion, looks away or actively avoids
  • May stiffen or lean away if picked up
  • Solomon George (1999) p. 291

14
Ambivalent (C)
  • Distressed, fretful, passive
  • Fails to explore
  • Unsettled, distressed by separation
  • Alternates bids for contact with signs of angry
    rejection
  • Fails to find comfort from the parent
  • Solomon George (1999) p.291

15
Insecure Attachment
  • Intense love and dependency
  • Fear of rejection
  • Irritability
  • Vigilance
  • Punish their attachment figure for any sign of
    abandonment

16
Insecure Attachment
  • The insecurely attached person is saying
  • Cling as hard as you can to people
  • they are likely to abandon you hang
  • on to them and hurt them if they show
  • signs of going away, then they may be
  • less likely to do so.
  • Holmes (1993)

17
Disorganized (D)
  • Behavior lacks an observable goal
  • Look fearful
  • Behavior is bizarre
  • May try to leave after the reunion or freeze

18
Attachment Behavioral System
Felt security, love, self-confidence
Attachment figure Near, responsive, attuned
Playful, smiling, Exploratory, sociable
Holmes (1993)
19
Attachment
  • Attachment is a reciprocal relationship
  • The parent offers caregiving behavior that
    matches the attachment behavior of the child
  • The child, using social referencing, checks in
    with the mother looking for cues that sanction
    exploration or withdrawal
  • Holmes (1993)

20
Parenting
  • Overanxious Parent inhibits childs exploratory
    behavior
  • Child feels stifled or smothered
  • Neglectful Parent inhibits exploration by
    failing to provide secure base
  • Child feels anxious or abandoned
  • Holmes (1993)

21
Attachment ProblemsBowlby
  • A severely hurt child fails to seek comfort
  • Signals that ordinarily activate attachment
    behavior fail to do so
  • System controlling attachment, and the feelings
    and desires associated, is rendered incapable of
    being aroused

22
Attachment From the Childs Point of View
  • How do children view their parents?
  • How do children learn to think about themselves
    as separate from their parents?

23
Internal Working Model
  • Based on the childs real-life experience of day
    to day interactions with his parents
  • Reflects the images the parents have of the child
  • Images communicated by how each parent treats the
    child and what each parent says to the child

24
Impact of the Internal Working Model
  • The model governs how children feel toward each
    parent and about themselves, how they expect to
    be treated and how they plan their own behavior
    toward their parent

25
Securely Attached Child
  • Internal Working Model
  • Responsive, loving, reliable caregiver
  • Self is worthy of love and attention

  • Holmes (1993)

26
Insecurely Attached Child
  • The world is dangerous
  • Treat others with great caution
  • Self is ineffective and unworthy of love
  • These assumptions are stable and enduring and
    terribly difficult to modify

  • Holmes (1993)
  • Video Rosies Kids

27
Development of Relationships
  • For a relationship between any two individuals
    to proceed harmoniously each must be aware of the
    others point-of-view, his goals, feelings, and
    intentions, and each must so adjust his own
    behavior that some alignment of goals is
    negotiated.

28
Development of Relationships
  • This requires that each should have reasonably
    accurate models of self and other which are
    regularly updated by free communication between
    them. It is here that the mothers of securely
    attached children excel, and those of the
    insecure are markedly deficient.
  • Bowlby (1988) p. 131

29
Parenting
  • How do parents foster secure attachment?
  • What should we look for when we observe parents?

30
Mothers of Secure Infants
  • Continuously monitor the infants state
  • Accurately interpret the signal for attention
  • Act accordingly to meet the infants needs

31
Mothers of Anxious Infants
  • Monitor the infants state only sporadically
  • Inconsistently notice the infants signals
  • May interpret the signal inappropriately
  • Respond to the signal inappropriately, or tardily

32
Ambivalently Attached Child
  • Shows overt aggression toward the inconsistent
    mother
  • Dont you dare do that again! but has to cling
    because he knows from experience that she will.

  • Holmes (1993)

33
Avoidant Child
  • Outbursts of unprovoked aggression
  • Needs to appease to the mother because the child
    wants so badly to feel close
  • Fears shell rebuff him if needs are revealed too
    openly or if anger about abandonment is shown
    too openly

  • Holmes (1993)

34
John Seventeen Months For Nine Days in a
Nursery James Joyce Robertson
35
Phases of Response to Separation
  • Protest
  • Upset, confused, frightened by loss of mother
  • Urgent desire to find mother
  • Looks eagerly toward any sight, sound
  • Despair
  • Increasing hopelessness
  • Less active, withdrawn, apathetic
  • Decreases demands on environment

36
Phases of Separation
  • Despair may be misinterpreted by presuming that
    distress has decreased because the child is
    settling in
  • Detachment
  • Makes the best of the situation by repressing
    longing for mother
  • When mother returns he hardly seems to know her
  • May appear to not need any mothering at all

37
John The Follow-up
  • First Week
  • Rejected his parents
  • Wont accept comfort or affection
  • Wont play
  • Shuts self in room
  • Cried a great deal
  • Cant cope with the slightest frustration
  • Aggressive and destructive

38
Follow-Up
  • Second Week
  • Undemanding
  • No tantrums
  • Plays alone quietly

39
Follow-Up
  • Third Week
  • Dramatic change
  • Tantrums return
  • Refuses food and loses weight
  • Sleep is disrupted
  • Gulf between parents and John

40
Follow-Up
  • One Month
  • Relationship with mother improves
  • Joyce visits and he regresses
  • Refuses food and attention
  • Three weeks later, second visit from Joyce
  • Extreme disturbance for 5 days
  • Includes aggression toward mother

41
Follow-Up
  • Three years after his stay in the residential
    nursery, when John was four and one half years
    old, he was a handsome, lively boy who gave much
    pleasure to his parents. But there were two
    marked features which troubled them. He was
    fearful of losing his mother and got upset if she
    was not where he thought she would be. And every
    few months he had bouts of provocative aggression
    against her which came out of the blue and lasted
    for several days.

42
Attachment The Parents Point of View
  • How does the parents past impact attachment?
  • How do we get in to the parents head?

43
Impact of Empathic Failure
  • Whatever she fails to recognize in him he is
    likely to fail to recognize in himself. In this
    way, it is postulated, major parts of a childs
    developing personality can become split off from,
    that is, out of communication with, those parts
    of his personality that his mother recognizes and
    responds to, which in some cases include features
    of personality that she is attributing to him
    wrongly. Bowlby (1988) p.132

44
Reflective Function
  • The reflective function refers to the
    psychological processes underlying the capacity
    to mentalize. . . mentalizing refers to the
    capacity to perceive and understand oneself and
    others behavior in terms of mental states, i.e.,
    reflection.
  • Fonagy, Steele, Steele Target (1997)

45
Reflective Function
  • Allows the individual to make sense of his or her
    own and others psychological experience, to
    enter into anothers experience, to read
    anothers mind
  • Allows the child to make others behavior
    meaningful and predictable, and permits him to
    respond adaptively
  • Slade (1999)

46
Reflective Function
  • The mothers capacity to understand the childs
    mental states create the context for a secure
    attachment relationship
  • The mother is able to view the infant as
    intentional
  • Reflective functioning provides protection
    against damaging effects of abuse and trauma
  • Slade (1999)

47
Reflective Function
  • The capacity to tell a story that is affectively
    believable
  • The capacity to understand emotional processes
  • The ability to accurately understand ones own and
    others behavior
  • Slade (2002)

48
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49
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50
Dyadic Patterns Marvin et al (2002)
  • Secure child Autonomous Parent
  • Easily approach and interact when distressed
  • The reunion calms the child and facilitates
    exploration
  • Child can shift between exploration and using the
    parent as a safe harbor with little anxiety
  • Close attunement disruptions easily repaired

51
Dyadic Patterns Marvin et al (2002)
  • Insecure child Dismissing Parent
  • Both partners minimize intimate
    attachment-caregiving interactions
  • Miscue Im really more interested in playing
  • Independence is highly valued
  • Overregulated affect, little emotional
    self-knowledge

52
Dyadic Patterns Marvin et al (2002)
  • Insecure Child
  • Ambivalent/Preoccupied Parent
  • Both partners minimize independent exploration
  • Child is overly dependent on the parent
  • Miscue dont explore, there really is something
    to be anxious about
  • Under-regulated affect

53
Dyadic Patterns Marvin et al (2002)
  • Insecure, Disordered Child
  • Disorganized/ Insecure Parent
  • Parent fears or becomes angry in response to
    childs attachment behavior and abdicates
    caregiving
  • Caregiver has unresolved trauma
  • Role reversed relationship

54
Maternal Attributions
  • Fixed beliefs that the mother has about the child
    beliefs that she perceives as objective,
    accurate perceptions of the childs essence.
  • Lieberman (2000)

55
Positive Maternal Attributions
  • When a mother sees her child as the cutest,
    most intelligent, most endearing being ever
    created, she is summoning from the depths of
    herself the capacity for ecstasy that allows her
    to put up with the inevitably annoying,
    exasperating, or simply tedious aspects of
    raising a child.
  • Lieberman (2000)

56
Maternal AttributionsProtective Function
  • Child feels adored
  • Allow child to cope with self-doubts and feelings
    of despair
  • Allow parent to better tolerate self-sacrifices
    that are integral to the parenting process
  • Lieberman (2000)

57
Parental Insightfulness
  • Parental empathic understanding involves the
    capacity to see things from the childs point of
    view within a balanced, accepting, and coherent
    frame.
  • Oppenheim (2000)

58
Balanced
  • Able to see experiences through their childs
    eyes and make attempts to understand the
    underlying motives
  • Talk openly about positive and negative aspects
  • Oppenheim (1999)

59
One-sided
  • Preset conception of their child
  • Difficulty staying focused on their child and
    their relationship with the child
  • Talk about their own feelings/issues
  • Oppenheim (1999)

60
Disengaged
  • Lack emotional involvement
  • Minimally attempt to understand whats on their
    childs mind
  • Oppenheim (1999)
  • Video

61
Foster Care and Permanency
  • How does foster placement effect development?
  • How do we assess relationships between the
    children and their biological as well as foster
    parents?
  • How long in foster care is too long? When can
    children still go home?

62
The Case of Sara
  • Placed for adoption upon discharge from the
    hospital
  • 5 months of age legal adoption is not completed
  • Sara enjoys a loving relationship with her
    parents
  • The parent child relationship is marked by
    reliable, emotionally attuned, and responsive care

63
The Case of Sara
  • Allegations of neglect arise
  • Sara is removed from the home at the age of 10
    months

64
The Case of Sara
  • Shelter home for four days
  • Second foster home for one week
  • Third foster home for eight
  • weeks
  • Adoptive home

65
The Case of Sara
  • Upon arrival to the adoptive home Sara stares
    blankly, refuses social interaction, and is
    oblivious to pain after undergoing a medical
    procedure
  • Believing that Sara is available for adoption her
    name is changed

66
The Case of Sara
  • At the age of 15 months Sara is responding well
    to her new environment
  • First adoptive family hasnt seen her for 6
    months and want her returned to their care

67
The Case of Sara
  • Should she return?
  • Who are the psychological parents?
  • Does she remember her first adoptive parents?
  • Shes so young that she wont remember anything
    and can be returned without distress
  • Sara is a resilient child

68
The Case of Sara
  • The internal working model viewing the world
    through Saras eyes
  • Assessing risk
  • Could reunion reactivate feelings of loss?
  • Utilization of second adoptive parents as a
    secure base
  • Impact of no contact

69
Factors Favoring Saras Return
  • Sara is a resilient child and can weather more
    moves.
  • Sara needs to return to be able to resolve her
    grief
  • As she gets older, Sara will long to be with her
    first adoptive family
  • Sara should not have been removed in the first
    place

70
Factors Against Saras Return
  • Length of time away from her first family without
    any contact
  • Her name change has impacted her Internal Working
    Model
  • She now views her new family as her only family
    and calls her new parents mama and dada

71
Factors Against Saras Return
  • Sara clearly shows signs of a secure attachment
    to her new parents
  • A return could, in fact, be viewed by Sara as
    traumatizing and as being ripped away from her
    family
  • Trauma could create a Reactive Attachment Disorder

72
Factors Against the Return of
Sara
  • Comparing the future stability of the two
    families
  • First family is struggling with high levels of
    stress and their relationship has been negatively
    impacted and, largely ignored
  • Second family has, and will likely, withstand
    stressors

73
Implications for Caseworkers
  • Request relationship-based assessments
  • Understand childrens needs vs. parental capacity
    for caregiving
  • Develop specific recommendations about what
    behaviors the parent needs to develop to
    successfully parent this particular child

74
Use of Supervised Visits
  • Used routinely but should be used for extreme
    cases where abuse/neglect even under supervision
    is of high risk
  • Need to find ways to allow for more contact with
    parents in a more natural setting
  • Therapeutic visits vs. supervised visits

75
Supervised Visits
  • Be mindful of the limits to interpretation of the
    behaviors between the parent and child
  • Playfulness does not equal attachment
  • Stress following the visit is natural and should
    not necessarily be interpreted to mean that
    visits are experienced negatively by the child

76
Observation of Parent-Child Relationship
  • Observe proximity seeking behaviors watch eye
    contact and social relatedness
  • Observe parental sensitivity and insightfulness
    to childs cues
  • Who does child seek out when frustrated or
    frightened
  • Use doll play to assess attachment hierarchy

77
Assessment Secure Base
  • Over the past two weeks can you think of a time
    when your child was
  • Hurt?
  • Frightened?
  • Separated from you?
  • What did your child do?
  • How did you respond?

78
Assessment of Parents Point of View
  • Interview questions
  • Could you give me a thumbnail sketch of your
    child?
  • Tell me about a time in the past two weeks when
    you and your child really clicked.
  • Tell me about a time when you didnt.
  • What gives you the most joy in your relationship?
  • What gives you the most pain?
  • Where do you turn for emotional support?
  • Steele (2003)

79
Attachment Toolbox
  • Nurturing Relationships
  • The Ideal Grandma
  • Anticipating Needs
  • Keeping the child in mind
  • Reading and responding to cues
  • Emotional Regulation
  • Proximity to the child
  • Reassurance
  • Emotional repairs - Time In

80
Time In
  • Stay close by to help the child calm down
  • Avoid processing until the child is calm
  • If child becomes aggressive distance yourself
    while reassuring the child that youll be
    available once the child is calm

81
Attachment Toolbox
  • Managing anxiety
  • Sleep Issues
  • Appetite Issues
  • Encourage checking-in behaviors
  • Providing structure and consistency
  • Protecting the child from trauma reminders
  • Positive communication skills

82
Attachment Toolbox
  • Developmentally appropriate expectations
  • Managing parental stress
  • Providing respite care

83
Treatment Options
  • Obtain comprehensive, relationship-based
    assessments
  • Supervised visits vs. Reunification treatment
  • Parent-child therapy
  • Individual therapy
  • Shelter vs. Residential treatment

84
Educating Parents
  • Parents need to understand childrens histories
    to be on alert for trauma reminders
  • Be realistic about attachment issues but
    recognize parents ability to hear the concerns
  • Encourage parents to seek treatment

85
Secure Base
  • When a child is held in mind, the child feels
    it, and knows it. There is a sense of safety, of
    containment, and, most important, existence in
    that other, which has always seemed to me vital.
    . . It seems to me that one of lifes greatest
    privileges is just that the experience of being
    held in someones mind.
    Pawl (1995)
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