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Attachment Issues in Clinical Practice: Issues for Research. Dr Ken Ma Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist Coventry CAMHS Coventry and Warwickshire Partnership Trust. Outline of Presentation. Brief overview of attachment theory Assessment of attachment
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Attachment Issues in Clinical Practice: Issues for Research Dr Ken Ma Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist Coventry CAMHS Coventry and Warwickshire Partnership Trust
Outline of Presentation • Brief overview of attachment theory • Assessment of attachment • Why attachment may be important as a clinical research variable • Why attachment may be important as a sociological/ political research variable • Attachment in clinical research - some findings
What is Attachment Theory? (1) • Conceived by Bowlby to explain an important evolutionary function of the child-caregiver relationship. • Gene survival promoted by selection of attachment behaviours leading to increased child-caregiver proximity. • When a child is attachedto someone, he or she is: …strongly disposed to seek proximity to and contact with a specific figure and to do so in certain situations, notably when he is frightened, tired or ill. Bowlby, Attachment and Loss, Vol.1 Attachment, 1969, p.371
What is Attachment Theory? (2) • The attachment figure thus acts as a ‘secure base’for the child, especially in times of stress. • The child can thus successfully explore outside world implications for social, emotional and cognitive development.
Attachment in Adulthood • Now generally agreed the attachment systemis operative throughout lifespan. • Attachment behaviours change. • Physical proximity important in childhood. • As child grows, availability/ trustworthiness of attachment figures becomes internalised psychologically cognitive-emotional representations. • Internal working models (IWMs)of self and attachment figures develop. • Different ways of measuring attachment in childhood and adulthood.
Measuring Attachment in Infancy - the Strange Situation Procedure Ainsworth et al. (1978) Mary Ainsworth (1913-1993)
The Strange Situation • Laboratory session lasting 20 minutes with 12-mth-old infant, caregiver and experimenter. • Responses of infant to separation from caregiver (moderate stress) and reunion with caregiver are assessed. • Four broad categories are observed. • Role of temperament/ genetic influences?
Measuring Attachment in AdulthoodThe Parenting Tradition vs. the Romantic Attachment Tradition(after Bartholomew & Shaver, 1998)
The Adult Attachment Interview (Main & Goldwyn, 1998) • Semi-structured interview about early attachment history. • Measures adolescent’s / adult’s state of mind with respect to attachment, e.g. current representations of childhood relationships with caregivers. • Questions designed to ‘surprise the unconscious’. • Focus on both content and discourse style. • Both categorical and continuous data. • Four categories similar to those in SS. • Very detailed (!) coding manual. • High correspondence between adult’s AAI category and infant’s subsequent category validity.
Categories on the AAI (2) • Participants with the U classification are also assigned one of the other categories that best captures underlying attachment strategies, i.e. U/F, U/Ds and U/E.
The Relationship Scales Questionnaire (RSQ) –An Example of a Romantic Attachment Tradition questionnaire Kim Bartholomew http://www.sfu.ca/psyc/faculty/bartholomew/
The RSQ • 30 descriptive items. Self-rated/ other-rated. • Interviewees score each item on scale of 1-5 to show level of agreement. • Examples: • I find it difficult to depend on other people. • I’m not sure that I can always depend on others to be there when I need them. • I worry that others don’t value me as much as I value them. • I often worry that romantic partners won’t want to stay with me.
Attachment in Clinical Research - The ‘Why Measure It?’ Question • Better understanding of aetiology of psychopathology • Attachment insecurity may be a (significant) risk factorfor psychopathology, in both childhood and adulthood. • Attachment security may be a resilience factorin adversity. • Attachment system likely to be activated in times of stress, e,g. psychiatric/ physical disorder • Attachment pattern may predict pattern of help-seeking, healthcare utilisation and compliance. • It may also influence the therapeutic alliance or patient-clinician relationship in ways that will help/ hinder treatment (process research). • Attachment pattern of clinicianmay similarly be important. • However, attachment is not the be-all and end-all!
Attachment in Sociological/ Political Research - Systemic Influences on the Healthcare System • Wider systemic issues. • Healthcare utilisation and expenditure - e.g. ‘heartsink patients’. • Attachment may predict political leaning (e.g. Ds and neo-fascism). • Attachment security of policy makers?
Attachment and Psychopathology - Some General Points • Majority of studies thus far cross-sectional. • Poor diagnostic clarity. • Different measures used make studies difficult to compare one explanation for contradictory results. • Questions of causality on the whole not answered as yet. • Relative balance of genetic and social/ environmental factors • Postulated association between ‘maximising’ attachment strategies and “internalising” psychopathology, and between ‘minimising’ attachment strategies and “externalising” psychopathology.
Depression • Association with preoccupied/ unresolved strategies (Fonagy et al.,1996 - n=82 pts, 85 controls; Cole-Detke & Kobak, 1996) • Association with preoccupied/ fearful attachment (Carnelly et al., 1994; Haaga et al., 2002; Reis & Grenyer, 2004) all using self-report measures.
Anxiety • Association with anxious-ambivalent attachment longitudinally (Warren et al., 1997) and with preoccupied/ unresolved attachment cross-sectionally (Fonagy et al., 1996) • Twaite & Rodriguez (2004) - attachment partially mediated link between childhood abuse and PTSD following 9/11 (self-report measure).
Borderline Personality Disorder • High proportion with a U/E classification - Fonagy et al., 1996; Barone, 2003.
Patterns of Help-Seeking Ciechanowski et al. (2002) • N =701 adult female primary care HMO pts. • RSQ. • Preoccupied and fearful patients reported more physical symptoms, but no differences between groups in medical co morbidity. • Patients with preoccupied attachment had the highest primary care costs and utilisation. • Those with fearful attachment had the lowest.
Compliance with Treatment Ciechanowski et al. 2000 • 276 tertiary care type I diabetes patients. • RSQ. • Dismissing attachment associated with significantly higher HbA1c. Dozier et al., 1990 • Those patients with insecure attachment less compliant with psychotropic medication.
Healthcare Staff as Attachment Figures • Can staff act as attachment figures for vulnerable clients whose attachment system is activated? • If so, what are the implications? • Compliance with management. • Formation of therapeutic alliance - especially with patients with dismissing attachment strategies. • How to assess attachment to staff/ services? • Goodwin’s Service Attachment Questionnaire (Goodwin et al., 2003).
Attachment Strategies of Healthcare Staff • Healthcare is a stressful preoccupation! • Dozier et al. (1994) • 18 psychiatric case managers - those with preoccupied attachment may intervene more actively with clients ?dominance of counter transference issues. • What are the implications? • Relevance for supervision? • Influence on outcome of treatment? • Implications for managers
Conclusions and Implications • Which measure is used depends on what one is trying to measure. • There are a number of areas where the consideration of attachment might provide fresh, valuable insight. • Please consider self-report measures!
Cassidy, J. & Shaver, P. (eds) (1999) Handbook of Attachment: Theory, Research and Clinical Implications. New York: Guilford. Ma, K. (2007) Attachment theory in adult psychiatry. Part 2: Importance to the therapeutic relationship. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment, 13, 10-16. Ma, K. (2006) Attachment theory in adult psychiatry. Part 1: Conceptualisations, measurement and clinical research findings. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment, 12, 440-9.