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Jean Mercer
Born 1941
Residence United States
Nationality American
Fields Developmental Psychology
Institutions retired
Alma mater Brandeis University

Jean Mercer (born October 16, 1941) is an educator and writer best known as an advocate for children who are adopted or come from the foster care system. She founded and is a leader of the controversial advocacy group, Advocates for Children in Therapy.

She has been an outspoken critic of Reactive attachment disorder (RAD) therapies and is the author of several books, including Thinking critically about child development: examining myths and misunderstandings. Mercer's articles on attachment disorder, harmful psychological treatments and other mental health issues have been published in peer reviewed journals. She has presented at conferences internationally, made television appearances, served as editor for an industry newsletter, and authors two blogs, Childmyths and The Study of Nonsense.

Education

Mercer attended Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley, Massachusetts, from 1959 to 1961. She received a BA in Psychology from Occidental College in Los Angeles, California, in 1963. In February 1968, she was awarded a Ph.D. in psychology from Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts.[1]

Career

From September, 1967 to June, 1969, Mercer held the position of assistant professor at Wheaton College in Norton, Massachusetts. From there, she moved to Buffalo, New York to serve as assistant professor at State University College, a position she held for two years before taking an assistant professorship at Richard Stockton College (now Stockton University) in Pomona, New Jersey in September 1974. Mercer remained at the college, attaining a full professorship in 1981, until her retirement in 2006. She is currently Professor Emerita of Psychology at Stockton University.[1]

Mercer is a developmental psychologist[2] who has spent much of her career as an advocate for evidence-based therapy techniques, particularly for children who are adopted or come from the foster care system.[3] She is an outspoken critic of RAD therapies (also known as attachment therapy, rebirthing, compression or coercive restraint therapy)[4] which, she says, are "completely contrary to mainstream medical practice"[2] and are used without empirical support for their efficacy.[5][4][6] These therapies, according to Mercer, involve techniques such as restricting food, restraining children so they can't move and forcing them to do meaningless, difficult chores as punishment,[7] and are practiced by people who "mistakenly equate obedience with attachment."[8] In 2003, Mercer co-wrote Attachment Therapy on Trial: The Torture and Death of Candace Newmaker, with Larry W. Sarner and Linda A. Rosa. The book is an in-depth exploration into the suffocation of Candace Newmaker, a 10-year-old Colorado girl, during one such session.[7]

Mercer was a consulting reader for articles that appeared in the journal Infants and Young Children (1992-2000),[9] editor for the New Jersey Association for Infant Mental Health's newsletter, The Phoenix (1994-1999),[9] and contributor and consulting editor for the Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice, a journal published by the Center for Inquiry.[10]

Major works

Child Development: Myths and Misunderstandings

In Child Development: Myths and Misunderstandings, published by Sage, Mercer provides readers with 51 essays that challenge or dispel common misconceptions about child development, starting with infancy and moving through the teen years. Mercer makes a distinction among myths (stories we tell ourselves), mistakes (erroneous information) and misunderstandings (misinterpretation of information) that have an impact on how people interpret research involving child development.[10] Topics addressed in the book include: vaccination and autism, sugar and hyperactivity, punishment and changing children's behavior, high-self esteem and student achievement, Sudden infant death syndrome, and violence in video games.[11] Mercer also discusses research findings from psychology that were current at the time the book was published, as well as "major gaps in knowledge" that needed further study.[11]

The book is intended to help readers (parents, college students) challenge assumptions rooted in their own childhood experiences and develop critical thinking skills for determining fact from conjecture. Discussion questions, provided after each exposed myth, help with this process.[11]

In its 3rd edition, the book was re-titled Thinking critically about child development: examining myths and misunderstandings.[12]

Understanding Attachment: Parenting, Child Care, and Emotional Development

In Understanding Attachment: Parenting, Child Care, and Emotional Development, published by Praeger, Mercer provides readers with an historical overview of attachment and makes a distinction between "the notion of attachment in many popular theories of parenting" and the "meaning of attachment in developmental psychology."[13] Based on empirical research, Mercer offers insight into attachment issues for children of varying ages (e.g., secure-base behavior, separation anxiety, negotiation of separation) and makes recommendations for creating "attachment friendly" environments for parents (biological or adoptive) and day care providers.[13][14]

Bibliography

Books

  • Attachment Therapy on Trial: The Torture and Death of Candace Newmaker, with Larry W. Sarner and Linda A. Rosa (Praeger, 2003) Template:ISBN
  • Understanding Attachment: Parenting, Child Care, and Emotional Development (Praeger, 2005) Template:ISBN
  • Child Development: Myths and Misunderstandings (Sage, 2nd edition, 2013) Template:ISBN
  • Alternative Psychotherapies: Evaluating Unconventional Mental Health Treatments (2014) Template:ISBN

Selected articles

  • 'Attachment therapy' using deliberate restraint: an object lesson on the identification of unvalidated treatments (2001)[15]
  • Attachment therapy: a treatment without empirical support[16]
  • Child psychotherapy involving physical restraint: techniques used in four approaches (2002)[17]
  • Snake oil, ethics, and the First Amendment: what's a profession to do? (2002)[18]
  • Violent therapies: the rationale behind a potentially harmful child psychotherapy [19]
  • Coercive restraint therapies: a dangerous alternative mental health intervention (2005)[20]
  • Behaving Yourself: Moral Development in the Secular Family, an essay in Parenting Beyond Belief: On Raiding Ethical, Caring Kids Without Religion, Dale McGowan (editor) (AMACON, 2007)[10]
  • Destructive trends in alternative infant mental health approaches (2007)[21]
  • Custody evaluations, attachment theory, and an attachment measure: the science remains limited (2009)[22]
  • Attachment theory and its vicissitudes: toward an updated theory (2011)[23]
  • The concept of psychological regression: metaphors, mapping, Queen Square, and Tavistock Square (2011)[24]
  • Some aspects of CAM mental health interventions: regression, recapitulation, and 'secret sympathies' (2011)[25]
  • Deliverance, demonic possession, and mental illness: some considerations for mental health professionals (2012)[26]
  • Evidence of Potentially Harmful Psychological Treatments for Children and Adolescents (2017)[27]

Notable appearances

Television

  • The US is becoming more and more supporters of "Attachment Therapy," OneTV, Moscow, Russia (March 3, 2013)[28]
  • Attachment Therapy & Russian Adoptees in the USA, Russian Television (February 21, 2013)[3]

Presentations

  • "Novel unsupported therapies: pseudoscientific and cult-like characteristics," with M. Pignotti and JD Herbert, International Cultic Studies Conference, Philadelphia, PA (2008)[29]
  • "Attachment theory, evidence-based practice, and rogue therapies: using and misusing the concept of attachment," with LA Rosa, RS Pennington, LW Sarner, Wisconsin School Psychology Association, La Crosse, Wisconsin (October 29, 2008)[3]
  • Testimony, US House of Representatives, Committee on Ways and Means, Subcommittee on Human Resources (with LW Sarner), November 20, 2003[3]
  • "Unconventional Psychotherapies: Some Questions About Their History," Eastern Psychological Association, Cambridge, MA (2011)[30]
  • "Fetal Psychology in Psychohistory: Where it Came From, Where it Went," Eastern Psychological Association, New,(2013)[31]
  • "Jirina Prekopova's holding therapy: Scientifically founded or otherwise?," Conference of the International Working Group on Abuse in Child Psychotherapy, London (2013)[9]

Professional societies

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Curriculum Vitae. URL accessed on 17 February 2017.
  2. 2.0 2.1 includeonly>"Ignorance as awful malice: Jury sees video of Candace Newmaker's final moments in 'rebirthing' therapy", National Post, April 6, 2001, p. A11.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Institute for Science in Medicine Fellows. URL accessed on 15 February 2017.
  4. 4.0 4.1 includeonly>"Therapist's death leaves questions", The Salt Lake City Tribune, December 20, 2004, p. A1.
  5. includeonly>"American therapy that killed Candace Newmaker", The Herald, June 21, 2001, p. 17.
  6. includeonly>"Therapy or abuse? Controversial treatments may sink Cascade", Deseret News, November 28, 2004, p. A01. Retrieved on 17 February 2017.
  7. 7.0 7.1 includeonly>"Couple accused of starving adopted sons", Knight Ridder Tribune News Service, December 1, 2003, p. 1.
  8. includeonly>"The Worst Adoption Therapy in the World", The Daily Beast, March 14, 2015. Retrieved on 17 February 2017.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 Childmyths: Jean Mercer's CV. URL accessed on 4 March 2017.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Jean Mercer - Child Development: Myths and Misunderstandings. URL accessed on 15 February 2017.
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 (January 1, 2011)It ain't necessarily so child development: A new field for skepticism. Skeptic Magazine 16 (2): 62–63.
  12. Thinking Critically About Child Development. URL accessed on 4 March 2017.
  13. 13.0 13.1 [[Carol Tavris|]] (October 6, 2006) Baby Love. Times Literary Supplement (5401).
  14. (May 2006) The many stages of attachment. Parent and Child: 50–51.
  15. (July 2001)'Attachment therapy' using deliberate restraint: an object lesson on the identification of unvalidated treatments. Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Nursing 14 (3): 105–114.
  16. (2002)Attachment therapy: a treatment without empirical support. Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice 1 (2): 9–16.
  17. (August 2002)Child psychotherapy involving physical restraint: techniques used in four approaches. Child and Adolescent Social Work Journal 19 (4): 303–314.
  18. (January 2002)Snake oil, ethics, and the First Amendment: what's a profession to do?. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 72 (1): 5–15.
  19. (Spring–Summer 2003)Violent therapies: the rationale behind a potentially harmful child psychotherapy. Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice 2 (1): 27–37.
  20. (August 2005)Coercive restraint therapies: a dangerous alternative mental health intervention. Medscape General Medicine 7 (3).
  21. (2007) Destructive trends in alternative infant mental health approaches. Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice 5 (2): 44–58.
  22. (2009) Child custody evaluations, attachment theory, and an attachment measure: the science remains limited. Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice 7 (1): 37–54.
  23. (February 11, 2011)Attachment theory and its vicissitudes: toward an updated theory. Theory and Psychology 21: 25–45.
  24. (May 2011)The concept of psychological regression: metaphors, mapping, Queen Square, and Tavistock Square. History of Psychology 14 (2): 174–196.
  25. (2011)Some aspects of CAM mental health interventions, regression, recapitulation, and 'secret sympathies'. Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice 8 (2): 36–55.
  26. (August 2, 2012)Deliverance, demonic possession, and mental illness: some considerations for mental health professionals. Mental Health, Religion & Culture 16 (6): 595–611.
  27. (December 15, 2016)Evidence of Potentially Harmful Psychological Treatments for Children and Adolescents. Child and Adolescent Social Work Journal: 1–19.
  28. In the United States becomes more and more supporters of "attachment therapy recover". URL accessed on 15 February 2017.
  29. ICSA Conference. URL accessed on 15 February 2017.
  30. 2011 EPA Program. URL accessed on 5 March 2017.
  31. 2013 EPA Program. URL accessed on 5 March 2017.

External links

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