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Maternal depression and the quality of early attachment: An examination of infants, preschoolers, and their mothers.
499
Citations
25
References
1995
Year
EducationMental HealthChild Mental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyFamily InteractionSocial-emotional DevelopmentEarly Childhood ExperienceClassification SystemChild PsychologyPsychiatryEarly Childhood DevelopmentMaternal DepressionMaternal HealthAttachment InsecurityAttachment TheoryCoherent Attachment StrategiesChild DevelopmentPediatricsParentingCaregiver StudiesEmotional DevelopmentEarly AttachmentPsychopathology
Relations between maternal depression and attachment security among 50 infant-mother and 54 preschool child-mother dyads were examined using the classification system of M.D.S. Ainsworth, M.C. Blehar, E. Waters, and S. Wall (1979) and M. Main and J. Solomon (1990) for infants and the Preschool Assessment (P.M. Crittenden, 1992b) for preschoolers. Attachment insecurity was significantly associated with maternal depression among infants and preschoolers. Futhermore, children without unitary, coherent attachment strategies tended to have more chronically impaired mothers than did children with coherent, organzed attachment strategies. Results stress the importance of severity-chronicity of parental illness in the study of depression and early attachment relations, and that differences between children with and without coherent, organized attachment strategies are as clinically informative as are differences between secure and insecure children
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