Early family adversity, stability and consistency of institutional care and infant cognitive, language and motor development across the first six months of institutionalization
Date
2019-11
Embargo
2020-11-30
Advisor
Coadvisor
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Language
English
Alternative Title
Abstract
This study extends research on the effects of institutionalization—by examining the trajectories
of cognitive, language and motor development of 64 Portuguese infants and toddlers across the
first six months of institutionalization, while determining whether pre-institutional adversities
and the stability and consistency of institutional care predict children’s development. At time of
enrollment, 23.4%, 32.8% and 31.3% of the children were moderately to severely delayed, respectively,
in their cognitive, linguistic and motor functioning. Developmental problems persisted
after six months of institutionalization. The accumulation of early pre-institutional adversities
predicted cognitive and motor limitations at admission to the institutions, but not
variation in subsequent development. The stability and consistency of institutional care also
failed to predict developmental growth and change. Children who had never lived with their
families of origin showed a better language development at enrollment than their counterparts
who had lived with their families of origin before institutionalization. Such advantage was followed
by a deceleration in language growth after six months of institutional placement. Results
are discussed in terms of short- vs. longer-term effects of institutionalization.
Keywords
Institutionalization, Infant development, Early family adversity, Stability and consistency of institutional care
Document Type
Journal article
Publisher Version
10.1016/j.infbeh.2019.101387
Dataset
Citation
Baptista, J., Belsky, J., Marques, S., Silva, J. R., Martins, C., & Soares, I. (2019). Early family adversity, stability and consistency of institutional care and infant cognitive, language and motor development across the first six months of institutionalization. Infant Behavior and Development, 57, 101387. doi: 10.1016/j.infbeh.2019.101387. Disponível no Repositório UPT, http://hdl.handle.net/11328/2993
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Access Type
Embargoed Access