Psychiatry International (Feb 2021)

The Activation Relationship to Father and the Attachment Relationship to Mother in Children with Externalizing Behaviors and Receiving Psychiatric Care

  • Daniel Paquette,
  • Chantal Cyr,
  • Sébastien Gaumon,
  • Martin St-André,
  • Mutsuko Émond-Nakamura,
  • Louise Boisjoly,
  • Irena Stikarovska,
  • Claud Bisaillon,
  • Guadalupe Puentes-Neuman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/psychiatryint2010005
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 59 – 70

Abstract

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The activation relationship refers to the emotional bond a child develops with a parent that helps ensure the regulation of risk-taking during child exploration of the surrounding environment. As a complement to Bowlby’s attachment theory, activation relationship theory provides a greater understanding of the impact of fathering on child development, focusing primarily on parental stimulation of risk-taking and control during child exploration. The overarching objective of this article is to better understand the association between children’s relationship quality with both parents, via the activation to father and the attachment to mother relationships, and child externalizing behaviors in a clinical sample. Fifty two-parent families (40 boys and 10 girls) were recruited at random from a population of children receiving treatment at the perinatal and early childhood psychiatry clinic. Results with 44 children (with complete cases) showed that overactivated preschoolers displayed more externalizing behaviors than did children with either an activated or an under-activated relationship with their father. Results also showed that children with a disorganized-controlling caregiving attachment to their mother marginally presented with higher levels of externalizing behavior.

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