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Advocates for Children in Therapy (ACT) is a non-profit United States advocacy group primarily opposed to attachment therapy. It asserts that a number of the psychotherapeutic techniques used by attachment therapists are potentially or actually harmful to children who undergo the treatment. The stated mission is to provide advocacy by "raising general public awareness of the dangers and cruelty" of practices related to attachment therapy. According to the group, "ACT works to mobilize parents, professionals, private and governmental regulators, prosecutors, juries, and legislators to end the physical torture and emotional abuse that is Attachment Therapy."[1]

The group is led by Linda Rosa, RN, Executive Director; Larry Sarner, Administrative Director; and Jean Mercer, PhD, President of its Board of Professional Advisors.

Opposition to attachment therapy

Attachment therapy is an ambiguous term with no precise professional meaning but popularly used to describe controversial, non-mainstream "treatments" for children allegedly suffering from attachment disorder, in itself an ambiguous term. (APSAC, 2006, p78[2]) There are many variants, for example “rebirthing therapy,” “compression holding therapy,” “corrective attachment therapy,” “the Evergreen model,” “holding time,” or “rage-reduction therapy” [2].

ACT says that "typically" attachment therapy involves "the imposition of boundary violations — most often coercive restraint — and verbal abuse on a child, usually for hours at a time … typically, the child is put in a lap hold with the arms pinned down, or alternatively an adult lies on top of a child lying prone on the floor" and as "a growing, underground movement for the 'treatment' of children who pose disciplinary problems to their parents or caregivers." The group further notes that attachment therapy "almost always involves extremely confrontational, often hostile confrontation of a child by a therapist or parent (sometimes both). Restraint of the child by more powerful adult(s) is considered an essential part of the confrontation" and refers to attachment therapy as "the worst quackery in our nation today."[3]

ACT has given seven criteria for identifying attachment therapy as follows:

"For our purposes, we have identified several distinguishing characteristics, any one of which qualifies a practice to be called Attachment Therapy:

  • "Practices, teaches or recommends restraint (or other violations of interpersonal boundaries) for an allegedly therapeutic purpose. The things mentioned are often deliberately confrontational and intrusive.
  • "Principally treats, or is concerned with, a condition of 'Attachment Disorder' (distinct from the DSM-recognized diagnosis of Reactive Attachment Disorder), and assesses for that condition using unvalidated diagnostic tools, or uses no tools at all for objective assessment.
  • "Practices or recommends treatment based on a belief in the efficacy of any of the following: re-traumatization; catharsis, especially through expression of rage, fear, sadness, or other 'negative' emotion; recapitulation (re-enactment, re-living, or 're-doing') of stages of development; or 'repatterning' of the brain.
  • "Adheres to unvalidated notions about child development or attachment, especially the so-called 'Attachment Cycle' (aka Bonding Cycle, Need Cycle, Rage Cycle). Though reference may be made to the attachment theory, pioneered by John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth, Attachment Therapy shares very little with that empirical work (and indeed runs counter to it in almost all important respects).
  • "Claims that AT practices are safe and efficacious when there is a near complete lack of scientific support.
  • "Practices or teaches harsh parenting and respite methods, based principally upon combinations of deprivation, isolation or humiliation for the child.
  • "Uncritically recommends materials (such as websites, books, videos, lectures, and conference presentations) which do any of the above."[3]

ACT also holds views on the non-standardized diagnosis of attachment disorder, stating, "A large fringe element of pseudoscientific psychotherapists — Attachment Therapists (AT) — have invented the dubious, unrecognized diagnosis of 'Attachment Disorder' (AD) and its cure. AD is thought to be a child's inability to form a close, loving relationship with his caregiver, typically because of early childhood abuse or neglect. Many, if not most, undesirable behaviors seen in childhood supposedly stem from AD."

ACT has advocated for the elimination of attachment therapy and is also critical of the referral of children for government-funded attachment therapy by courts and state workers, referring to such practices as "state-sponsored torture."[4]

Activities

The group reports that its three leaders, Jean Mercer, Larry Sarner, and Linda Rosa, were directly involved in prosecution of Connell Watkins and Julie Ponder in the so-called "rebirthing" case in 2001 before the group's formation the following year. "All three authors assisted the prosecution in the trial that resulted in historic 16-year sentences for therapists Connell Watkins and Julie Ponder." Later, the three wrote a book on the case, Attachment Therapy on Trial: The Torture and Death of Candace Newmaker (Praeger, 2003).[5]

ACT also entered a statement into the record of a Congressional hearing into a child starvation case.[6]

References

  1. Advocates for Children in Therapy (2004). Mission statement.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Chaffin M, et al. (Feb 2006). Report of the APSAC Task Force on Attachment Therapy, Reactive Attachment Disorder, and Attachment Problems. Child Maltreatment 11 (1): 76–79. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "APSAC 2006" defined multiple times with different content
  3. 3.0 3.1 Advocates for Children in Therapy (2003). Overview of attachment therapy. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "ACT 2003a" defined multiple times with different content
  4. Advocates for Children in Therapy (2003). Government Subsidies for Attachment Therapy.
  5. Advocates for Children in Therapy. New Book Examines AT. AT News.
  6. Sarner LW, Mercer J (2003). Statement Before Human Resources Subcommittee of US House Ways & Means Committee.

External links

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