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Prospective parents may require therapy

Posted: 26 June 2003 | Subscribe Online


Adoption social workers will have to increase their sensitivity to prospective adopters' previous experience of loss or trauma if more adoptions are to be successful, new research suggests.

The Adoption and Attachment Representations Research Project measured the attachments and psychological development of 65 maltreated children aged four to eight years old, and their adopters, over the first two years of placement.

"The majority of children, even those who were very damaged, benefited from their adoptive placements over time," said a spokesperson for the project. "However, 11 of the 65 did not progress. These children had adoptive mothers with unresolved adult attachment issues. We speculate that they were pre-occupied with their own problems and memories."
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The project, which involved the Anna Freud Centre, Coram Family and Great Ormond Street Hospital, suggests that if adoption workers identified these problems at the pre-placement stage, the parents could seek therapeutic help. This would mean children and adopters being matched more successfully.

- More on the project can be found at www.annafreudcentre.org/


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