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. 2010 May;38(4):459-70.
doi: 10.1007/s10802-009-9383-4.

Behavior problems in children adopted from psychosocially depriving institutions

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Behavior problems in children adopted from psychosocially depriving institutions

Emily C Merz et al. J Abnorm Child Psychol. 2010 May.

Abstract

Behavior problems were investigated in 342 6- to 18-year-old children adopted from psychosocially depriving Russian institutions that provided adequate physical resources but not consistent, responsive caregiving. Results indicated that attention and externalizing problems were the most prevalent types of behavior problems in the sample as a whole. Behavior problem rates increased with age at adoption, such that children adopted at 18 months or older had higher rates than never-institutionalized children but younger-adopted children did not. There was a stronger association between age at adoption and behavior problems during adolescence than at younger ages at assessment. Children adopted from psychosocially depriving institutions had lower behavior problem rates than children adopted from severely depriving Romanian institutions in the 1990s. The implications of these results are that early psychosocial deprivation is associated with behavior problems, children exposed to prolonged early deprivation may be especially vulnerable to the developmental stresses of adolescence, and severe institutional deprivation is associated with a higher percentage of behavior problems after a shorter duration of exposure.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Percentage of clinical/borderline scores on the CBCL scales for PSD children adopted <9, 9–17, and ≥18 months. The horizontal line at 14% represents the rate of T scores ≥61 in the standardization sample. Chi-square tests of differences in the percentage of clinical/borderline scores across three levels of age at adoption (behavior problems in same order as figure): χ2 (2)= 23.64, p<0.001; 9.93, p<0.01; 8.64, p<0.05; 36.13, p<0.001; 1.45, ns
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Predicted levels of CBCL Social Problems as a function of age at adoption for PSD children who were 6–11 and 12–18 years of age at assessment

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