Depriving children of a loving family environment causes
lasting damage to their intelligence, emotional wellbeing
and even their physical stature, according to the most extensive
study of social deprivation yet. A lack of care and attention
left children with stunted growth, substantially lower IQs
and more behavioural and psychological problems than children
who had been better cared for.
The extent to which children are sensitive to the environment
they grow up in emerged from an unprecedented study, the
Bucharest Early Intervention Project. It is the first
randomised clinical trial set up to investigate the effects
of social deprivation on the emotional, psychological and
physical health of children. The study has been running
for five years and records the wellbeing of children in
a Romanian orphanage from an early age, and the changes
they experience when transferred to foster care. The orphanage
represents an extreme of social deprivation because the
children are typically looked after by a rota of carers
who will be responsible for 12 to 15 children at any one
time.
[.] The study found that a child's environment had a marked
effect on intelligence and emotional development. It measured
IQ and ability to express positive emotions in 136 children
aged six to 30 months. All had spent time in the orphanage,
but 69 had been moved into foster homes. The studies showed
that children in the most deprived conditions had exceptionally
low IQs, but once they were removed to foster homes, improved
when tested again at 42 and 54 months. Similarly, the children's
ability to express positive emotions also improved markedly
when they were moved into a family environment.
The report, at the American Association for the Advancement
of Science meeting in St Louis yesterday, shows that emotional
and cognitive impairments caused by a poor social environment
can be substantially improved if living conditions are improved
early enough, according to Professor Nathan Fox of the University
of Maryland.
Not all of the psychological problems caused by a difficult
upbringing were fixed by later improving conditions. Psychiatric
problems were three and a half times more common among institutionalised
children, but moving them to stable family environments
did not always improve their mental condition. While the
study showed children in foster homes had few psychiatric
problems, with less anxiety and depression than those in
orphanages, their behavioural problems, including being
aggressive and confrontational, did not subside. The children's
response was different depending on gender, with girls more
likely to have emotional problems and boys more prone to
behavioural disorders.
Charles Nelson, a paediatrics specialist at Harvard University,
used measurements of brain activity to assess whether a
lack of social interaction and attention might harm children's
neural development. Using EEG (electroencephaolograms),
Dr Nelson looked at the strength of brain activity relative
to children who had never been institutionalised. The measurements
showed children in the orphanage had less powerful activity
in all parts of their brains. In this case, placing the
children into foster homes failed to bring about significant
improvement.
In a further brain study, Dr Nelson's team used a test
called ERP, event-related potential, which measures the
brain's response to certain stimuli, such as being shown
happy, sad, angry or fearful faces. "What we are seeing
is that with the institutionalised children their brain's
response to the faces was weaker and they took longer to
respond," he said.
(Ian Sample, American Association for
the Advancement of Science meeting, St Louis, reported in
The Guardian, 18.02.06)