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      Can inattention/overactivity be an institutional deprivation syndrome?

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          Abstract

          Elevated rates of attention deficit and overactivity have been noted previously in samples of institution-reared children. This study examined the hypothesis that inattention/overactivity(I/O) might constitute a specific deprivation syndrome. One hundred and sixty five children adopted at varying ages (e.g., 0-42 months of age) into the UK following severe early deprivation were compared with 52 within-UK adoptees who did not suffer deprivation. The children were rated by teachers and parents on levels of I/O, conduct difficulties, and emotional difficulties using the Revised Rutter Scales. Data were collected at age 6 for the entire sample and at age 4 for the UK adoptees and for the subsample of Romanian children who entered the UK before the age of 2 years. Mean level analyses suggested a significant effect of duration of deprivation on I/O, but not on conduct or emotional difficulties. The effects of duration of deprivation were specific to I/O and were not accounted for by low birth weight, malnutrition, or cognitive impairment. Levels of I/O correlated with attachment disturbances. Furthermore, the effects of duration of deprivation on I/O did not attenuate over time. We conclude that I/O may well constitute an institutional deprivation syndrome, but that the type of attention deficit and overactivity exhibited by these children may present a different clinical picture from that of "ordinary" varieties of attention deficit disorder or hyperkinetic syndrome.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Abnorm Child Psychol
          Journal of abnormal child psychology
          Springer Science and Business Media LLC
          0091-0627
          0091-0627
          Dec 2001
          : 29
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, University of London, United Kingdom. j.kreppner@iop.kcl.ac.uk
          Article
          10.1023/a:1012229209190
          11761285
          c210621c-9755-4f4a-936b-c636f79d2465
          History

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