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  2. Attachment and health - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attachment_and_Health

    Causal relationships between insecure attachment and mental illness may be complex. [7] [8] [15] Some risk factors for insecure attachment such as loss of parental figure, and sexual or physical abuse, are also risk factors for mental health disorders. [8] Self-report measures of attachment may be biased by mental health conditions.

  3. Dynamic-maturational model of attachment and adaptation

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamic-maturational_model...

    It assesses the child's generalized attachment pattern, self-protective strategies, pattern of information processing, level and type of risk, and possible unresolved trauma and loss. [60] It was initially developed in 1997 by Crittenden, has been tested in eight research studies, and is considered to provide discriminate validity.

  4. Reactive attachment disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reactive_attachment_disorder

    The Mayo Clinic, a well known U.S. non-profit medical practice and medical research group, cautions against consulting with mental health providers who promote these types of methods and offer evidence to support their techniques; to date, this evidence base is not published within reputable medical or mental health journals. [71]

  5. Attachment in adults - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attachment_in_adults

    The working models of children found in Bowlby's attachment theory form a pattern of interaction that is likely to continue influencing adult relationships. [ 2 ] Investigators have explored the organization and the stability of mental working models that underlie these attachment styles.

  6. Disinhibited social engagement disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disinhibited_social...

    Willingness to go off with an unfamiliar adult with minimal or no hesitation [2] The attachment style associated with DSED is disorganized attachment. This attachment style is a combination of anxious and avoidant attachment and participants often have a need for closeness, fear of rejection, and contradictory mental states and behaviors.

  7. Disinhibited attachment disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disinhibited_attachment...

    Disinhibited attachment disorder (DAD) according to the International Classification of Diseases (), is defined as: "A particular pattern of abnormal social functioning that arises during the first five years of life and that tends to persist despite marked changes in environmental circumstances, e.g. diffuse, nonselectively focused attachment behaviour, attention-seeking and indiscriminately ...

  8. Attachment in children - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attachment_in_children

    Four different attachment classifications have been identified in children: secure attachment, anxious-ambivalent attachment, anxious-avoidant attachment, and disorganized attachment. Attachment theory has become the dominant theory used today in the study of infant and toddler behavior and in the fields of infant mental health, treatment of ...

  9. Adult attachment disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adult_Attachment_Disorder

    Adult attachment disorder (AAD) develops in adults as the result of an attachment disorder, or reactive attachment disorder, that goes untreated in childhood. It begins with children who were not allowed proper relationships with parents or guardians early in their youth, [ 1 ] or were abused by an adult in their developmental stages in life.