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Journal Article

Citation

Crittenden PM, Robson K, Tooby A, Fleming C. Clin. Child Psychol. Psychiatry 2017; 22(3): 358-377.

Affiliation

3 University of Washington, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1359104517704027

PMID

28429614

Abstract

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.


Language: en

Keywords

AAI; Attachment; DMM-AAI; SAA; school-age children; transgenerational attachment

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