ATTACHMENT STRATEGIES AND ADAPTIVE SYMPTOM FUNCTION

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 88-98
Author(s):  
N.L. Pleshkova
2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura E. Brumariu ◽  
Kathryn A. Kerns ◽  
Jean-François Bureau ◽  
Karlen Lyons-Ruth

2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 358-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia M Crittenden ◽  
Katrina Robson ◽  
Alison Tooby ◽  
Charles Fleming

Aims: We explored the relation between mothers’ protective attachment strategies and those of their school-age children. Methods: In total, 49 child–mother dyads participated in a short longitudinal study when the children were 5.5 and 6.0 years old. Their strategies were first assessed with the Preschool Assessment of Attachment (PAA) and then with the School-age Assessment of Attachment (SAA). Mothers were assessed with the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI). The Dynamic-Maturational Model of Attachment and Adaptation (DMM) was used to classify the assessments. Results: The validity and precision of the DMM-AAI were supported: Mothers’ AAI classifications were related to their referral group (normative or clinical) and measures of stress and distress. The DMM categories were more associated with risk than the Ainsworth categories. Types A, C and A/C were differentiated by trauma, triangulation and depression. Mothers’ and children’s protective attachment strategies were related, with B mothers having B children and A or C mothers having children using the same or opposite strategy. Children whose classification changed from the PAA to the SAA had mothers with complex traumas. Conclusion: When psychosocial treatment is needed, knowing whether mother and child use the same or different strategies and whether mothers have complex trauma can affect treatment success.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 278-291
Author(s):  
Milla Syrjänen ◽  
Airi Hautamäki ◽  
Natalia Pleshkova ◽  
Sinikka Maliniemi

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to explore the parental sensitivity and self-protective strategies of parents with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and those of their children. Design/methodology/approach Six parents with ADHD and their under 3-years-old children participated. One parent took part with her both children. The data included seven parent-child dyads. The parents were interviewed with the modified Adult Attachment Interview. Parental sensitivity was assessed using the CARE-Index. The self-protective strategies of the children were assessed with The Strange Situation Procedure or the Preschool Assessment of Attachment. Findings The study showed a variety of the self-protective strategies of parents with ADHD as well as those of their children. Three subgroups were formed on the basis of risk as indicated by Crittenden’s gradient of transformation of information. Parents displayed complex self-protective strategies as well as unresolved traumas, which impaired their sensitivity and ability to engage in mutual regulation of arousal and emotion. The parents’ needs of self-protection compromised their ability to protect and comfort their child that is their sensitivity. The children’s protective strategies matched those of their parents in regard to complexity as mediated by parental sensitivity. Originality/value This multiple-case study demonstrates new ideas to be tested with quantitative methods in larger samples. There are no previous studies which have examined both the attachment strategies and sensitivity of parents with ADHD connecting these with the evolving attachment strategies of their children.


2014 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 232-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deleene S. Menefee ◽  
Susan X Day ◽  
Frederick G. Lopez ◽  
Robert H. McPherson

2017 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 381-397 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oliver Bailey-Pearce ◽  
Jacqui Stedmon ◽  
Rudi Dallos ◽  
George Davis

When a child has a life-limiting illness, parental involvement is amplified, having to respond to the increased needs of the child. Both parents are affected by the illness, yet research has largely under-represented fathers’ experiences of their child’s illness. Seven fathers were interviewed about their experiences with their child’s life-limiting illness. In addition, fathers’ attachment strategies were assessed using the Adult Attachment Interview. Narrative analysis was implemented to explore the interviews, and indicators of attachment markers employed in the Adult Attachment Interview were also identified. The dominant themes were found to be ‘experience of the diagnosis’, ‘living with the illness’, ‘struggling with emotions’ and ‘relationship with staff’. Within each theme, there were differences which related to the father’s attachment strategies. This was particularly evident in parts of their narratives recounting critical moments of threat and anxiety in the course of discovering and adjusting to their child’s illness. Importantly, the findings also suggested that the experience for the fathers stressed, and in some cases disrupted, their attachment coping strategies. All fathers told stories of trying to get it right for their children and family. Their experiences of, and adjustment to, the illness were related to their attachment strategies. The clinical implications for health professionals are discussed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 92 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lars E. Holmer ◽  
Zhifei Zhang ◽  
Timothy P. Topper ◽  
Leonid Popov ◽  
Thomas M. Claybourn

AbstractThe kutorginates are commonly the most abundant rhynchonelliform brachiopod found in the early Cambrian; they are also some of the oldest known rhynchonelliforms, first appearing in the Unnamed Series 2 (Atdabanian equivalent) and becoming extinct sometime in Cambrian Series 3 (Amgaian equivalent). Moreover, kutorginates are the first known member of the rhynchonelliforms for which we have a detailed knowledge of their soft-part anatomy, including the lophophore, digestive tract, and pedicle—all exceptionally preserved inKutorgina chengjiangensisZhang et al., 2007 from the early Cambrian Chengjiang Lagerstätte of southern China. The stout and annulated pedicle in the original report was described as protruding between the valves; however, newly collected better-preserved material now clearly shows that the pedicle actually protrudes from the apical perforation ofKutorgina chengjiangensis.This type of apical pedicle has also been described from other early Cambrian rhynchonelliforms, including the problematic chileateLongtancunella chengjiangensis(Zhang et al., 2011a). Exceptionally preserved similar pedicles are also known to emerge apically from the Silurian chileate dictyonellidEichwaldia subtrigonalisBillings, 1858, as well as from the recently described Silurian chileateTrifissura rigidaHolmer, Popov, and Bassett, 2014. However, it is clear that the only other exceptionally preserved kutorginate—a silicifiedNisusia—was provided with an adult pedicle emerging between the valves from a posterior gap; thus,Nisusiahas two pedicle openings. However, the apical foramen may represent the earliest attachment of the larvae, which subsequently became nonfunctional through ontogeny. It is suggested that both types of attachment strategies may have appeared early in the stem lineage of the Rhynchonelliformea.


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