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Psychology Case Study Riley

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Riley's exhibits trust related issues. Toddler is unable to obey given instructions from the mother. Riley exhibits restlessness and insomnia, which creates irritability. Toddler sleeps only a few hours a night with no naps during the day. Living in a single-parent home with a parent suffering from postpartum depression and lacking social support, the toddler has increased aggression towards mother due to maternal deprivation. Approximately 10 percent of all mothers are affected by depression (Dickstein ,1998). Mothers who suffer depression tend to be withdrawn from their children, lacking emotion, as well as having negative responses towards their children.(Frankel & Harmon, 1996). Riley is unresponsive in the presence of her mother. She is …show more content…

Parental verbal interaction resulted in Riley not being stimulated in regards to language and psychosocial development. Parents and children are biologically related, studies have shown that there is a correlation linking parenting behavior and child outcome. There are three effects that are associated with parent and child behavior. The parent as well as the child's behavior and the overlap between the genetic influences on the child and parents behavior. Since parent and child share 50% of their genetic makeup with their parents, there should be a relationship between the parent and child behavior. (Jaffee, 2012). Infants who have parents who suffer from postpartum depression show patterns of an impairment in the physiological regulatory mechanism system. Mothers who suffer from postpartum depression are less likely to stimulate their child ( Murray, …show more content…

Attachments are not an automatic response but there must be a give-and-take communication between the parent and the child. In regards to maternal depression, if the mother is unresponsive to the child's attempt to get her attention, the child becomes unresponsive in the presence of their mother. During the oral stage according to Erickson (1950), infants are depended upon their parents to feed them; this is where they gain a sense of trust and ease. During the psychosocial stage development, the infant is depended upon the caregiver to build up trust based on reliability. When being unable to trust their parents, infants develop a fear that the world is contradictory and impulsive causing the child to be exposed to a world that they cannot trust. Parent Management training programs have been proven successful in reducing child behavior in families. The primary goal of the program is to change a child's behavior by increasing parental involvement. Care management trainee programs address the parent-child relationship to promote child direct play. (Eyberg, 2001). Parent-child interaction therapy is an intervention therapy that targets parent- child attachment and communication intervention. Parent and toddler programs promote the development of positive parenting skills, helping

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