Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Reactive_attachment_disorder> ?p ?o }
- Reactive_attachment_disorder abstract "Reactive attachment disorder (RAD) is described in clinical literature as a severe and relatively uncommon disorder that can affect children. RAD is characterized by markedly disturbed and developmentally inappropriate ways of relating socially in most contexts. It can take the form of a persistent failure to initiate or respond to most social interactions in a developmentally appropriate way—known as the \"inhibited form\"—or can present itself as indiscriminate sociability, such as excessive familiarity with relative strangers—known as the \"disinhibited form\". The term is used in both the World Health Organization's International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10) and in the DSM-IV-TR, the revised fourth edition of the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). In ICD-10, the inhibited form is called RAD, and the disinhibited form is called \"disinhibited attachment disorder\", or \"DAD\". In the DSM, both forms are called RAD; for ease of reference, this article will follow that convention and refer to both forms as reactive attachment disorder.RAD arises from a failure to form normal attachments to primary caregivers in early childhood. Such a failure could result from severe early experiences of neglect, abuse, abrupt separation from caregivers between the ages of six months and three years, frequent change of caregivers, or a lack of caregiver responsiveness to a child's communicative efforts. Not all, or even a majority of such experiences, result in the disorder. It is differentiated from pervasive developmental disorder or developmental delay and from possibly comorbid conditions such as intellectual disability, all of which can affect attachment behavior. The criteria for a diagnosis of a reactive attachment disorder are very different from the criteria used in assessment or categorization of attachment styles such as insecure or disorganized attachment. DSM-5, the fifth revised edition published in 2013, separates RAD into two separate disorders: reactive attachment disorder (previously referred to as the \"inhibited\" form), and social engagement disorder.Children with RAD are presumed to have grossly disturbed internal working models of relationships that may lead to interpersonal and behavioral difficulties in later life. There are few studies of long-term effects, and there is a lack of clarity about the presentation of the disorder beyond the age of five years. However, the opening of orphanages in Eastern Europe following the end of the Cold War in the early-1990s provided opportunities for research on infants and toddlers brought up in very deprived conditions. Such research broadened the understanding of the prevalence, causes, mechanism and assessment of disorders of attachment and led to efforts from the late-1990s onwards to develop treatment and prevention programs and better methods of assessment. Mainstream theorists in the field have proposed that a broader range of conditions arising from problems with attachment should be defined beyond current classifications.Mainstream treatment and prevention programs that target RAD and other problematic early attachment behaviors are based on attachment theory and concentrate on increasing the responsiveness and sensitivity of the caregiver, or if that is not possible, placing the child with a different caregiver. Most such strategies are in the process of being evaluated. Mainstream practitioners and theorists have presented significant criticism of the diagnosis and treatment of alleged reactive attachment disorder or the theoretically baseless \"attachment disorder\" within the controversial form of psychotherapy commonly known as attachment therapy. Attachment therapy has a scientifically unsupported theoretical base and uses diagnostic criteria or symptom lists markedly different to criteria under ICD-10 or DSM-IV-TR, or to attachment behaviors. A range of treatment approaches are used in attachment therapy, some of which are physically and psychologically coercive, and considered to be antithetical to attachment theory. Many constitute abuse.".
- Reactive_attachment_disorder icd10 "F94.1,F94.2".
- Reactive_attachment_disorder icd9 "313.89".
- Reactive_attachment_disorder meshId "D019962".
- Reactive_attachment_disorder thumbnail Mother-Child_face_to_face.jpg?width=300.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageID "740176".
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageLength "76879".
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageOutDegree "117".
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageRevisionID "702418105".
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Abuse.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Adoption.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Affect_(psychology).
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Age_regression_in_therapy.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink American_Academy_of_Child_and_Adolescent_Psychiatry.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink American_Professional_Society_on_the_Abuse_of_Children.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink American_Psychiatric_Association.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Anxiety_disorder.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Attachment_disorder.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Attachment_in_children.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Attachment_measures.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Attachment_parenting.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Attachment_theory.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Attachment_therapy.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Attention_deficit_hyperactivity_disorder.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Autism_spectrum.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Borderline_personality_disorder.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink British_Association_for_Adoption_and_Fostering.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Category:Adoption,_fostering,_orphan_care_and_displacement.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Category:Attachment_theory.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Category:Borderline_personality_disorder.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Category:Emotional_and_behavioral_disorders_in_childhood_and_adolescence.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Category:Human_development.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Category:Psychiatric_diagnosis.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Category:Trauma_and_stressor_related_disorders.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Catharsis.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Charles_H._Zeanah.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Child_abuse.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Child_development.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Clinical_psychology.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Cold_War.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Comorbidity.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Conduct_disorder.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Daniel_Schechter.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Dehydration.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Developmental_psychology.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Diagnostic_and_Statistical_Manual_of_Mental_Disorders.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Differential_diagnosis.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Disease.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Disinhibited_attachment_disorder.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Emotional_dysregulation.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Epidemiology.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Ethology.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Evidence-based_medicine.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Evolutionary_psychology.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Externalization.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Failure_to_thrive.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Family_therapy.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Foster_care.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Genetic_disorder.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Growth_hormone.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Human_behavior.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink ICD-10.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Infant.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Intellectual_disability.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink International_Statistical_Classification_of_Diseases_and_Related_Health_Problems.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink John_Bowlby.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Longitudinal_study.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Malnutrition.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Mary_Ainsworth.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Medical_diagnosis.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Mental_health.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Neglect.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Neuroscience.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Nosology.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Obedience_(human_behavior).
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Oppositional_defiant_disorder.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Pathogen.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Pediatric_schizophrenia.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Pediatrics.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Pervasive_developmental_disorder.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Posttraumatic_stress_disorder.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Prevalence.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Psychiatry.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Psychological_abuse.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Psychological_resilience.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Psychology.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Psychopathology.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink René_Spitz.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Self-monitoring.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Sensitivity_and_specificity.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Social_anxiety_disorder.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Stanley_Greenspan.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Temperament.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Therapy.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Twin_study.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:_antithetical.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:sociability.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLink World_Health_Organization.
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLinkText "RAD".
- Reactive_attachment_disorder wikiPageWikiLinkText "Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD)".