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Attachment development in children adopted from China:The role of pre-adoption care and sensitive adoptive parenting.

Chloë FinetTheodore E A WatersHarriet J VermeerFemmie JufferMarinus van IJzendoornMarian J Bakermans-KranenburgGuy Bosmans
Published in: Attachment & human development (2020)
The current study examined the attachment development of 92 internationally adopted Chinese girls, focusing on the influence of type of pre-adoption care (institutional versus foster care) and sensitive adoptive parenting. Although the children were more often insecurely attached than non-adopted children 2 and 6 months after adoption (Times 1 and 2, N = 92), they had similar levels of secure base script knowledge (SBS knowledge) as a non-adopted comparison group at age 10 (Time 3, N = 87). Furthermore, concurrently observed sensitive parenting was positively associated with SBS knowledge. Finally, a significant interaction between type of pre-adoption care and early-childhood sensitive parenting indicated that the post-institutionalized children showed a stronger increase in security than the post-foster children when parents were more sensitive.
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