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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 Jun 1.
Published in final edited form as: Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev. 2013 Jun;16(2):101–145. doi: 10.1007/s10567-013-0130-6

Table 3.

Reactive Attachment Disorder and Disinhibited Social Behavior

Study Country of origin Severity of deprivation Age at assessment N Construct measured Outcome measure Age at adoption: Distribution Age at adoption: Measurement Statistical test Significant effect of age at adoption? Form of the relationship? Relationship with other variables?
Positive Results
Bruce, Tarullo, & Gunnar (2009) Eastern Europe, China1 Socially-emotionally depriving 6–7y 40 disinhibited social behavior observational measure; parent interview2 < 36m continuous correlation yes mediated by inhibitory control
O’Connor, Bredenkamp, Rutter, & The ERA Study Team (1999) Romania Globally depriving 4y 111 disinhibited or inhibited attachment behavior 3-item parent interview3; additional items for inhibited attachment < 24m continuous and < 6m, 7–24m correlation yes linear not mediated by nutritional deprivation or cognitive impairment
O’Connor, Rutter, & The ERA Study Team (2000) Romania Globally depriving 4y, 6y 165 disinhibited or inhibited attachment behavior 3-item parent interview3; additional items for inhibited attachment 58 < 6m, 59 6–24m, 48 > 24m continuous and < 6m, 6–24m, > 24m correlation, chi-squared yes linear not accounted for by other behavioral or emotional problems, or by cognitive ability; stable from 4y to 6y
Rutter, Kreppner, & O’Connor (2001) Romania Globally depriving 6y 165 disinhibited or inhibited attachment behavior 3-item parent interview3; additional items for inhibited attachment 58 < 6m, 59 6–24m, 48 > 24m < 6m, 6–24m, > 24m chi-square trends yes
Rutter, O’Connor, and the ERA Study Team (2004) Romania Globally depriving 4y, 6y 144 disinhibited attachment 3-item parent interview3 45 < 6m, 54 6–24m, 45 > 24m < 6m, 6–24m, > 24m chi-square; correlation yes
Rutter, Sonuga-Barke, Beckett, Castle, Kreppner, Kumsta, Schlotz, Stevens, & Bell (2010) Romania Globally depriving 6y, 11y, 15y 144 disinhibited attachment 3-item parent interview3 58 < 6m, 59 6–24m, 48 > 24m < 6m (combined with non-PI), > 6m Fisher’s exact test yes partial mediation by head circumference (20% of total effect)
Sonuga-Barke, Beckett, Kreppner, Castle, Colvert, Stevens, Hawkins, & Rutter (2008) Romania Globally depriving 11y 138 disinhibited attachment 3-item parent interview3 .5–3y7m < 6m, > 6m ANOVA; regression yes overall sample: not mediated by head circumference; sub-nourished subgroup: possibly mediated by head circumference
Mixed Results
Rutter, Colvert, Kreppner, Beckett, Castle, Groothues, Hawkins, O’Connor, Stevens, & Sonuga-Barke (2007) Romania Globally depriving 4y, 6y, 11y 111 disinhibited attachment 3-item parent interview3 44 < 6m, 88 6–42m continuous and < 6m, 6–42m chi-square; phicoefficient (contrast); t-test yes, for persistence of DA over time, and for correlation among 6–42m at adoption group, but ns for correlation of whole sample
Smyke, Zeanah, Gleason, Drury, Fox, Nelson, & Guthrie (2012) Romania Globally depriving4 6m–8y 68 disinhibited attachment disorder Disturbances of Attachment Interview (first 5 items) 5 (parent-report) Md = 24m6 < 24m, > 24m6 repeated-measures ANOVA yes interaction with age at assessment
Romania Globally depriving4 6m–8y 68 inhibited attachment disorder Disturbances of Attachment Interview (last 3 items) 7 (parent-report) Md = 24m6 < 24m, > 24m6 repeated-measures ANOVA no
Null Results
Ames (1997) Romania Globally depriving most 4.5y; some 5.5–9y 46 indiscriminate friendliness 5-item parent interview8 8–68m; Md = 18.5m9 continuous9 no
Chisholm (1998) Romania Globally depriving 1y5m–9y2m 46 indiscriminate friendliness 5-item parent interview8 8–68m; Md = 18.5m9 9 no
Chisholm, Carter, Ames, & Morison (1995) Romania Globally depriving4 1y5m–6y4m 46 indiscriminate friendliness 5-item parent interview8 8–68m; Md = 18.5m continuous correlation no
Nielsen, Coleman, Guinn, & Robb (2004) Ug and a Various levels of deprivation 1–3y 33 discriminating social behavior observation of free play 3m–3y; M = 1.5y, SD = .67y10 < 1y, 1–2y, 2–3y10 ANCOVA no
Tizard & Hodges (1978) UK Adequate 8y 25 “over-friendliness” parent interview or observations 2y–7.5y no
Tizard & Rees (1975) UK Adequate 4.5y 24 “over-friendliness” or “indiscriminately affectionate” observations M = 3.11y; SD = .69 no
Age at admission: Distribution Age at admission: Measurement Significant effect of age at admission
Oliveira, Soares, Martins, Silva, Marques, Baptista, & Lyons-Ruth (2012) Portugal 11–30m 74 indiscriminate behavior RISE (observational measure based on SSP) 26% at birth, 24% < 5m, 23% 5–12m, 16.2% 12–18m, 10.8% 18–24m continuous and various cutoff points correlation, other tests not listed no

DA = disinhibited attachment, RISE = Rating of Infant and Stranger Engagement, SSP = Strange Situation Procedure, m = months, y = years, M = mean, Md = median, SD = standard deviation

1

The vast majority of children adopted from China are female

2

Items were: child too eager to approach, made personal comments to adults, initiated physical contact with unfamiliar adults

3

Items were: definite lack of differentiation among adults with respect to the child’s social response to them, clear indication that the child would readily go off with a stranger, definite lack of checking back with parent in anxiety-provoking situations

4

This article did not provide information about the conditions of these institutions, but other studies from the same authors on the same sample did describe the severity of the deprivation.

5

Items were: whether the child has developed a preference for a specific caregiver, approaches the caregiver for comfort, responds to comfort when offered, engages in reciprocal social interaction, regulates emotions well

6

In this study, children moved from an institution to foster care (not an adoptive home) at this age

7

Items were: whether the child checks back with the caregiver when exploring, shows age-appropriate reticence around strangers, demonstrates willingess to “go off” with a stranger

8

Items were: child wandered without distress, child would be willing to go home with a stranger, child was friendly to strangers, child was ever shy, what a child typically did upon meeting new adults

9

This study used time in the orphanage instead of age at adoption; these two variables were correlated at r = .97