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1.
J Intellect Disabil ; 27(4): 847-870, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35648732

ABSTRACT

The Attachment and Biobehavioral Catchup intervention potentially offsets psychosocial risks facing dyads in which children have intellectual disability or developmental delays. In this single-case multiple-baseline study the efficacy of this intervention was tested across three such South African families. Maternal sensitivity, attachment security, and child affect regulation were measured weekly during a baseline and intervention period, using the Ainsworth Maternal Sensitivity Scales, Attachment Q-sort and salivary cortisol, respectively. Furthermore, post-intervention interviews invited parents' and intervenors' evaluations of the intervention. Visual analysis broadly indicated improvement in maternal sensitivity and attachment security across subjects over time following the introduction of the intervention, although randomisation tests were not statistically significant. Effects on affect regulation were not clearly observed and may have been influenced by case-specific variables. Parent-participants and intervenors also identified particularly helpful contributions from the intervention. Findings underscore the importance of individual-level effects evaluation, especially when implementing interventions outside the original population.


Subject(s)
Hydrocortisone , Intellectual Disability , Humans , Child , Infant , Child, Preschool , Object Attachment , Parents/psychology , Parenting/psychology
2.
Infant Ment Health J ; 44(1): 54-75, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36538474

ABSTRACT

Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-up (ABC) is an intervention targeted at enhancing the socioemotional and regulatory functioning of at-risk infants. However, to use the ABC for infants/toddlers with intellectual disabilities/developmental delays (ID/DD) and in novel cultural contexts, such as South Africa, adaptations may be required. This study aimed, therefore, to explore the opinions of clinical experts and perceptions of caregivers regarding the use of ABC for children with ID/DD in South Africa. It also sought to incorporate the experiences of families of children with ID/DD who received, and intervenors who delivered, ABC in its first implementation in South Africa. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 18 participants. Thematic analysis explicated 12 main themes: Intervention Strengths, Points of Concern, and Recommendations (Experts); Focus on Caregiver-child Relationship, and Intervention Targets and Duration (Caregivers); Benefits of ABC, and Cultural Considerations (ABC Recipients); Focused and Targeted, Value of Feedback, Supportive Supervision, Working Alliance, and Challenges Experienced (ABC Intervenors). Practice and training recommendations include psychoeducation for parents and training for intervenors that is ID/DD-specific, expanding supervision capacity, building intervenors' cultural/linguistic sensitivity and competence, accessing referral networks, including local Community Health Workers as intervenors, and greater flexibility in how the sessions are organized.


La intervención de Afectividad y Alcance del Bio-comportamiento (ABC) está dirigida a mejorar el funcionamiento socioemocional y regulatorio de los infantes bajo riesgo. Sin embargo, para usar el ABC para infantes y niños pequeñitos con discapacidades intelectuales / retrasos en el desarrollo (ID/DD) y dentro de nuevos contextos culturales, tal como en Sudáfrica, se requieren adaptaciones. Este estudio se propuso, por tanto, explorar las opiniones de expertos clínicos y las percepciones de quienes prestan el cuidado acerca del uso del ABC con niños con ID/DD en Sudáfrica. También buscaba incorporar las experiencias de familias de niños con ID/DD que recibían, así como de practicantes de la intervención que ofrecían el servicio de ABC durante su primera implementación en Sudáfrica. Se llevaron a cabo entrevistas semiestructuradas con 18 participantes. Análisis temáticos explicaron los 12 principales temas: Puntos Fuertes de la Intervención, Puntos que Preocupan y Recomendaciones (Expertos); Enfoque en la Relación Cuidador-Niño y Metas de Enfoque y Duración de la Intervención (Cuidadores); Beneficios del ABC y Consideraciones Culturales (Quienes recibían el ABC); Lo Enfocado y Diseñado como Meta, Valor de Ideas Recibidas, Supervisión con Apoyo, Alianza de Trabajo y Retos Experimentados (Practicantes de la Intervención ABC). Las recomendaciones de práctica y entrenamiento incluyen la psico-educación de padres, entrenamiento a quienes practican la intervención específicamente orientada a ID/DD, expandir la capacidad de supervisión, formar la sensibilidad y competencia cultural/lingüística de quienes practican la intervención, acceso a los sistemas de referencias, incluir Trabajadores de Salud Comunitarios como practicantes de la intervención y mayor flexibilidad en cómo organizar las sesiones.


L'attachement et le rattrapage bio-comportemental (en anglais Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-up, soit ABC) est une intervention ciblée sur l'amélioration du fonctionnement socio-émotionnel et régulatoire de bébés à risques. Cependant, pour utiliser l'ABC pour des bébés/jeunes enfants avec des retards intellectuels et des retards du comportement (ID/DD) et dans des contextes culturels nouveaux, comme l'Afrique du Sud, des adaptations pourraient être nécessaires. Par conséquent cette étude s'est donné pour but d'explorer les opinions d'experts cliniques et les perceptions des personnes prenant soin d'un bébé quant à l'utilisation de l'ABC pour des enfants avec ID/DD en Afrique du Sud. On a aussi cherché à incorporer les expériences de familles d'enfants avec ID/DD qui ont reçu l'ABC, ainsi que des intervenants qui l'ont facilité, dans sa première mise en oeuvre en Afrique du Sud. Des entretiens semi-structurés ont été faits avec 18 participants. Une analyse thématique a explicité 12 thèmes principaux: Forces de l'Intervention, Points d'Inquiétude, et Recommandations (Experts); Accent sur la Relation Personne prenant soin de l'enfant-enfant et Cibles d'Intervention et Durée d'Intervention (Personnes prenant soin d'un bébé); Bénéfices de l'ABS, et Considérations Culturels (personnes ayant reçu l'ABC); Ciblé et Centré, Valeur du Retour, Supervision de Soutien, Alliance entre entités, et Défis Vécus (Intervenants ABC). Les recommandations de pratique et de formation incluent une psychoéducation pour les parents, une formation pour les intervenants qui est spécifique à l'ID/DD, l'élargissement de la capacité de supervision, le développement de la sensibilité et de la compétence culturelle/linguistique des intervenants, l'accès aux réseau d'orientation, y compris des Travailleurs de Santé Communautaires en tant qu'intervenants, et une plus grande flexibilité dans la manière dont les sessions sont organisées.


Subject(s)
Intellectual Disability , Parenting , Humans , Infant , Child, Preschool , Parenting/psychology , Intellectual Disability/psychology , South Africa , Object Attachment , Parents/psychology
3.
J Intellect Disabil ; 19(3): 251-65, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25691440

ABSTRACT

Attachment and attachment-related psychopathology has increasingly gained focus since Bowlby introduced the concept into the clinical repertoire. However, little has been done to explore attachment, or attachment-based interventions, within the context of intellectual disability. Clinical experience, however, has demonstrated significant attachment-related problems in children with intellectual disability. This article explores one such case of a 13-year-old girl with moderate intellectual disability and severe and persistent externalizing behavioural difficulties - biting, in particular. Once the severity of the behaviour was formulated within the framework of attachment, a structured attachment-focused parent-child intervention was designed in order to repair the damaged attachment between mother and daughter as a way of addressing the problematic behaviour. Outcomes demonstrated a sustained - immediately, at 3- and 6-month follow-up - positive impact of the intervention not only on the presenting problem but also on the quality of the relationship between mother and daughter. Research and clinical implications are discussed.


Subject(s)
Aggression/psychology , Family Therapy/methods , Intellectual Disability/rehabilitation , Mother-Child Relations/psychology , Object Attachment , Problem Behavior/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans
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