AI Article Synopsis

  • Secure attachment between caregivers and children helps reduce stress and promotes better neurodevelopment, while insecure attachment can lead to increased cortisol levels and developmental issues.
  • A study with preschoolers showed that insecurely attached children had higher cortisol responses and poorer skills, but cortisol levels did not mediate the relationship between attachment and neurodevelopment.
  • While attachment and cortisol did not predict telomere length in children, fostering secure attachments may have broader positive effects on health and development.

Article Abstract

Background: Secure attachment reflects caregiver-child relationship in which the caregiver is responsive when support and comforting are needed by the child. This pattern of bond has an important buffering role in the response to stress by the reduction of the negative experience and its associated physiological response. Disruption of the physiological stress system is thought to be a central mechanism by which early care impacts children. Early life stress causes cellular and molecular changes in brain regions associated with cognitive functions that are fundamental for early learning.

Methods: The association between attachment, cortisol response before and after the Strange Situation Experiment, and neurodevelopment was examined in a sample of 107 preschoolers at age three. Also, the predictive effect of cortisol reactivity and attachment on telomere length at age seven was investigated in a followed-up sample of 77 children.

Results: Children with insecure attachment had higher cortisol secretion and poorer neurodevelopmental skills at age three. A significant cortisol change was observed across the experiment with non-significant interaction with attachment. The attachment and neurodevelopment association was not mediated by cortisol secretion. Preschoolers' attachment and cortisol did not associate nor interacted to predict telomere length at age seven.

Conclusion: These findings add evidence to the detrimental effects of insecure attachment as an aggravator of the physiological response to stress and poorer neurodevelopment during the preschool period. Although attachment and cortisol were not predictive of telomere length, intervention policies that promote secure attachment are more likely to positively echo on several health domains.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9606391PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2022.954977DOI Listing

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