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Early childhood neglect and brain damage Options
thar
Posted: Monday, February 20, 2012 7:24:17 AM

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I remember watching documentaries about Romanian orphanages, and thinking at the time how could they treat children that way. Everyone complacently blaming the system. And wondering how a political system could deliberately produce unwanted children and a society that lost its humanity and caring.

some scientific evidence, scary, that some of the damage cannot be reversed:

Quote:
Harsh conditions in childhood have long-term effects
Kids from Romanian orphanage also had lower volumes of gray matter
By Laura Sanders Web edition : Saturday, February 18th, 2012
VANCOUVER — Living in harsh conditions in an orphanage early in life has long-lasting consequences for a child’s social skills, a new study finds.

Children who spent their first two years in a Romanian orphanage behaved abnormally in social interactions with other children, even years after leaving the institution. Life in the orphanage was also linked to brain abnormalities, Charles Nelson of Harvard Medical School reported February 17 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

“I think this work nails the really important issues in trying to understand the effects of early life experiences,” said psychologist Janet Werker of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.

Since 1999, Nelson and colleagues have followed 136 children who were abandoned at birth and placed in an orphanage in Bucharest, Romania — a Spartan environment where the children spent hours staring at a white wall and followed a highly regimented schedule of activities. The kids received very little attention from caregivers.

Nelson and his team arranged for half of these children to move into individual homes for foster care. (A bias against foster care in Romania made the situation unusual.) Called the Bucharest Early Intervention Project, the experiment offered a way to test the importance of a good environment.

Echoes of a hard start in life persisted long after the orphans had moved into a home, the team found. At age 8, kids who spent their first 2 years or longer in the orphanage before moving to foster care had profound deficits in how they interacted with other children. These children couldn’t carry on a conversation normally and had other social problems.

But kids who escaped the orphanage before they turned 2 were able to recover normal social skills, performing as well as children who had been raised in their own homes.

In addition to behavioral problems, the children raised in an orphanage showed brain differences, too. MRI brain scans revealed that kids who were institutionalized had dramatically lower volumes of gray matter — which contains the brain’s nerve cells —than children who grew up normally in their own home. Whether or not the child moved to a foster home didn’t matter: Living in an orphanage for any amount of time was tied to reduced gray matter.

But the story was different for another kind of brain tissue: The volume of white matter — tissue that carries nerve cell signals around the brain — was lower for kids who were in an orphanage for two or more years, but the volume was greater in children who left the orphanage before age 2. The results suggest that white matter, a brain tissue that is thought to be heavily responsive to the environment, may be able to bounce back from an early rough start.

“Institutional care should be considered the last resort,” Nelson said. “And effort should be made to place a child as soon as possible.”
redqueen56
Posted: Monday, February 20, 2012 8:39:19 AM
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Interesting, years ago a study was done on nutrition/malnutrition in pregnancy and the outcome for intelligence, using subjects who were the offspring of women who were pregnant during the occupation of Poland.

The results showed early to mid-gestational malnutrition wreaked havoc on the intelligence, not just of the next generation, but following generations as well.

It would be interesting to know if the generations following the orphans regained brain mass comparable to their grandparents generation.
Yakcal
Posted: Monday, February 20, 2012 9:00:39 AM

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Thanks for the excellent article, thar.

I wonder how the impact of a childhood spent with parent/s who provide no affection, nurturing, or mental stimulation to the child would compare to being brought up in an orphanage?

I know of a woman (my sister) that had at least 5, maybe 6, children from multiple partners because she worked as a prostitute. She was under the influence of drugs most of the time and her mental energy was spent devising ways to boost her income. The children were all taken in and adopted by another sister, but not until the children were all over the age of 6 or older. While I don't know of any brain scans performed on the kids I do know that their lives started out very rough indeed.

They have all experienced severe social problems with one being so bad that he had to be institutionalized both for his safety and that of anyone around him. The others fared better by degrees, but all are paying dearly for the neglect they experienced as they grew from babies to toddlers and beyond.

One can read in the news, almost daily here in the U.S., of people committing crimes that seem to show that they have no empathy for those around them. They often seem to be from single parent households and from the large inner cities where their upbringing was probably much like that of my nephews and nieces.

How we care and provide for our elderly and our children speaks volumes to how a society cares for its people overall. I hope that we can come to understand how vitally important those first few year of life is for each and every child. Signs of abuse and/or neglect should never be ignored and steps should be taken to ensure that the child's welfare is seen to at once.

Thanks again for the thought provoking article thar.

Be yourself; everyone else is already taken. -Oscar Wilde
dingdong
Posted: Monday, February 20, 2012 9:22:58 AM

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Yakcal,
I can imagine the story of your family must be a fascinating one.
Christine
Posted: Monday, February 20, 2012 10:46:09 AM

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The same results for children who were confined in an attic or basement for years.
It's sad.
We are blessed with our minds.

I am carrying my heart~I am carrying my rhythm~I am carrying my prayers~But you can't kill my spirit~It's soaring and strong (Paula Cole's Me Lyrics)***We are not human beings having a spiritual experience. We ARE spirtual beings having a human experience.(T.deChardin)***There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle. (Albert Einstein)



FounDit
Posted: Monday, February 20, 2012 1:27:12 PM

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From the book:

TOUCHING: THE HUMAN SIGNIFICANCE OF THE SKIN (Second Edition). Copyright
1971, 1978 by Ashley Montagu.

p. 77
During the nineteenth century more than half the infants in their first year of life regularly died from a disease called marasmus, a Greek word meaning "wasting away." The disease was also known as infantile atrophy or debility. As late as the second decade of the twentieth century the death rate for infants under one year of age in various foundling institutions throughout the United States was nearly one hundred percent.

p. 78
Finally, Dr. J. H. M. Knox described a study he had made in Baltimore. Of two hundred infants admitted to various institutions, almost 90 percent died within
a year. The 10 percent that survived, he stated, did so apparently because they were taken from the institutions for short times and placed in care of foster parents or relatives.

p.79
What was wanting in the sterilized environment of the babies of the first class and was generously supplied to babies of the second class was mother love. Recognizing this in the late twenties, several hospital pediatricians began to introduce a regular regimen of mothering in their wards. Dr. J. Brennemann, who for a time had attended an old-fashioned foundling home where "the mortality was nearer 100 percent than 50 percent," established the rule in his hospital that every baby should be picked up, carried around, and "mothered" several times a day. At Bellevue Hospital in New York, following the institution of "mothering" on the pediatric wards, the mortality rates for infants under one year fell from 30 to 35 percent to less than 10 percent by 1938. What the child requires if it is to prosper, it was found, is to be handled, and carried, and caressed, and cuddled, and cooed to, even if it isn't breastfed. It is the handling, the carrying, the caressing, and the cuddling that we would here emphasize, for it would seem that even in the absence of a great deal else, these are the reassuringly basic experiences the infant must enjoy if it is to survive in some semblance of health. Extreme sensory deprivation in other respects, such as light and sound, can be survived, as long as the sensory experiences at the skin are maintained.


Bonding, connection is so important to humans that it cannot be overemphasized in my opinion. All mammals need it, but humans even more-so. I believe it to be the foundation upon which all else is built.

A fascinating book. I read it years ago, and would recommend it to anyone. It may be found online and downloaded in pdf format at:

http://www.archive.org/details/touchingthehuman000913mbp






A great many people will think they are thinking when they are merely rearranging their prejudices. ~ William James ~
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