Attachment-Based Parenting Interventions and Evidence of Changes in Toddler Attachment Patterns: An Overview
- PMID: 35982272
- PMCID: PMC9622506
- DOI: 10.1007/s10567-022-00405-4
Attachment-Based Parenting Interventions and Evidence of Changes in Toddler Attachment Patterns: An Overview
Abstract
There is strong evidence to show links between attachment security in young children and a range of positive outcomes in social, emotional, and psychological domains. The aims of this review were to provide a narrative summary of (1) the attachment-based interventions currently available for caregivers of toddlers aged 12-24 months and for which research about the impact of the program on child attachment patterns has been reported, and (2) the empirical effectiveness of these interventions at improving attachment security. A number of interventions were shown to be associated with shifts to secure and/or organized attachment, with Child-Parent Psychotherapy and Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-Up emerging as the interventions with the strongest evidence bases. For most interventions, evidence came from just a single research study, and in some cases from studies that were not randomized controlled trials. In order for clinicians to make informed decisions about the interventions they use with parents and toddlers, it is vital that further research be conducted to test the efficacy of all available attachment-based parenting programs using randomized controlled trial designs, in a range of settings and clinical and cultural groups, and with longitudinal follow-ups.
Keywords: Attachment; Attachment-based interventions; Parenting; Toddler.
© 2022. The Author(s).
Conflict of interest statement
Authors Jane Kohlhoff and Cheryl McNeil are co-developers of one of the interventions described in this review (Parent–Child Interaction Therapy-Toddlers). The other authors have no competing interests to declare.
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