4.3 Article

Middle childhood attachment-based family therapy: Theory and model description

Journal

FAMILY PROCESS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/famp.12887

Keywords

attachment; attachment-based family therapy; intervention development; middle childhood; parent-child intervention

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In middle childhood, early signs of mental health problems can indicate future issues in adolescence. Strengthening the parent-child attachment can help reduce this risk, but evidence-based interventions are currently lacking for this age group.
In middle childhood, the first manifestations of mental health problems can emerge and become a precursor of mental health issues in adolescence. Given that weak parent-child attachment can contribute to this distress, it is possible that strengthening the attachment bond could reduce risk trajectory. Unfortunately, evidence-based attachment-focused interventions are lacking at this age. Attachment-based family therapy (ABFT) is a well-studied intervention for troubled adolescents and has the potential to be extended downward to children. However, ABFT for adolescents focuses on mentalization and trauma conversation strategies that may be developmentally advanced for children's capacities. Therefore, we modified the intervention strategies to be more developmentally sensitive to childhood. Middle childhood ABFT (MCABFT) builds on the theory that insecure attachment develops through a learning process that can be interrupted and reorganized to promote secure attachment development. MCABFT uses less conversation and more play and puts parents more at the center of the therapy compared with ABFT for adolescents. In this article, we describe MCABFT's theoretical and clinical model.

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