Protecting the child while preserving the relationship: Using baby's relational withdrawal to gauge the effect of parental visitation.

The impact of children's interactions with parents in the context of out-of-home placements is receiving much-needed cross-disciplinary attention. However, the paucity of instruments that can reliably represent young children's experiences of such interactions precludes a nuanced evaluatio...

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Main Authors: Alexandra Deprez, Jaqueline Wendland, Line Brotnow, Arno C Gutleb, Servane Contal, Antoine Guédeney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5933754?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-a163bca8c07a4f8b9ad4eaab2918f1192020-11-24T20:41:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01135e019668510.1371/journal.pone.0196685Protecting the child while preserving the relationship: Using baby's relational withdrawal to gauge the effect of parental visitation.Alexandra DeprezJaqueline WendlandLine BrotnowArno C GutlebServane ContalAntoine GuédeneyThe impact of children's interactions with parents in the context of out-of-home placements is receiving much-needed cross-disciplinary attention. However, the paucity of instruments that can reliably represent young children's experiences of such interactions precludes a nuanced evaluation of their impact on wellbeing and development. In response to this empirical gap, the present study investigates children's relational withdrawal as a clinically salient, easily observable and conceptually valid measure of infants' and toddlers' responses to parents. Relational withdrawal, challenging behaviors and salivary cortisol were assessed before, during and after parental visits. Conceptually, the findings suggest that observations of relational withdrawal correlate meaningfully with measure of neurobiological reactivity. Clinically, three profiles of cross-variable responses in children appeared, distinguishing between groups that experience increased, decreased or unchanged levels of stress in response to parental visits. Taken together, the findings lend empirical support to systematic observations of relational withdrawal to bolster evaluations of young children's experience of parental visitation during out-of-home placements.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5933754?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexandra Deprez
Jaqueline Wendland
Line Brotnow
Arno C Gutleb
Servane Contal
Antoine Guédeney
spellingShingle Alexandra Deprez
Jaqueline Wendland
Line Brotnow
Arno C Gutleb
Servane Contal
Antoine Guédeney
Protecting the child while preserving the relationship: Using baby's relational withdrawal to gauge the effect of parental visitation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Alexandra Deprez
Jaqueline Wendland
Line Brotnow
Arno C Gutleb
Servane Contal
Antoine Guédeney
author_sort Alexandra Deprez
title Protecting the child while preserving the relationship: Using baby's relational withdrawal to gauge the effect of parental visitation.
title_short Protecting the child while preserving the relationship: Using baby's relational withdrawal to gauge the effect of parental visitation.
title_full Protecting the child while preserving the relationship: Using baby's relational withdrawal to gauge the effect of parental visitation.
title_fullStr Protecting the child while preserving the relationship: Using baby's relational withdrawal to gauge the effect of parental visitation.
title_full_unstemmed Protecting the child while preserving the relationship: Using baby's relational withdrawal to gauge the effect of parental visitation.
title_sort protecting the child while preserving the relationship: using baby's relational withdrawal to gauge the effect of parental visitation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description The impact of children's interactions with parents in the context of out-of-home placements is receiving much-needed cross-disciplinary attention. However, the paucity of instruments that can reliably represent young children's experiences of such interactions precludes a nuanced evaluation of their impact on wellbeing and development. In response to this empirical gap, the present study investigates children's relational withdrawal as a clinically salient, easily observable and conceptually valid measure of infants' and toddlers' responses to parents. Relational withdrawal, challenging behaviors and salivary cortisol were assessed before, during and after parental visits. Conceptually, the findings suggest that observations of relational withdrawal correlate meaningfully with measure of neurobiological reactivity. Clinically, three profiles of cross-variable responses in children appeared, distinguishing between groups that experience increased, decreased or unchanged levels of stress in response to parental visits. Taken together, the findings lend empirical support to systematic observations of relational withdrawal to bolster evaluations of young children's experience of parental visitation during out-of-home placements.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5933754?pdf=render
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