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8 Week Treatment Plan

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8 Week Treatment Plan using Expressive Group Therapy working with children who struggle with insecure attachment.

What does insecure attachment look like?

Attachment can be defined as “an emotional tie with another person, shown in young children by seeking closeness to the caregiver and showing distress on separation” (Myers, 1998). Early bonding experiences have a significant impact on the developing child and achieving a positive bond is essential to the child’s overall well being later in life. The relationship formed between caregiver and child acts as a template for all subsequent relationships. There are four different patterns of response that are considered to …show more content…

Taking that high percentage into consideration, combined with today’s current understanding that attachment is a powerful influence upon a persons long-term functioning and their capacity to form meaningful attachments, greatly contributed to my decision in forming a treatment plan for children with insecure attachment.
*Note* I have been unable to find current data as to whether or not that percentage has risen or fallen and further inquiry is needed. Since John Bowlby’s initial writings on attachment theory there has been a multitude of studies demonstrating that the relationship between caregiver and child effects how the infant brain develops. In Malchiodi’s book, Creative Interventions with Traumatized Children, she offers the reader a neuroscience perspective that supports the theory that expressive therapy could be more effective then verbal therapies alone. She writes, “interactions between children and parents or caregivers determine the brain’s structure for children, promoting the development of the prefrontal cortex responsible for reasoning, problem solving, flexibility, and other important functions.” (Malchiodi, 2008). Malchiodi goes on to discuss the writings of Siegel (1999) and Schore (1994), who are both experts in neurobiology and have extensively studied early childhood development. Siegel and Schore believe that “interactions

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