Author:
Cyr Chantal,Euser Eveline M.,Bakermans-Kranenburg Marian J.,Van Ijzendoorn Marinus H.
Abstract
AbstractThe current meta-analytic study examined the differential impact of maltreatment and various socioeconomic risks on attachment security and disorganization. Fifty-five studies with 4,792 children were traced, yielding 59 samples with nonmaltreated high-risk children (n= 4,336) and 10 samples with maltreated children (n= 456). We tested whether proportions of secure versus insecure (avoidant, resistant, and disorganized) and organized versus disorganized attachments varied as a function of risks. Results showed that children living under high-risk conditions (including maltreatment studies) showed fewer secure (d= 0.67) and more disorganized (d= 0.77) attachments than children living in low-risk families. Large effects sizes were found for the set of maltreatment studies: maltreated children were less secure (d= 2.10) and more disorganized (d= 2.19) than other high-risk children (d= 0.48 andd= 0.48, respectively). However, children exposed to five socioeconomic risks (k= 8 studies,d= 1.20) were not significantly less likely to be disorganized than maltreated children. Overall, these meta-analyses show the destructive impact of maltreatment for attachment security as well as disorganization, but the accumulation of socioeconomic risks appears to have a similar impact on attachment disorganization.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
639 articles.
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