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The Haifa Study of Early Child Care recruited a large-scale sample (N = 758) that represented the full SES spectrum in Israel, to examine the unique contribution of various child-care-related correlates to infant attachment. After controlling for other potential contributing variables--including mother characteristics, mother-child interaction, mother-father relationship, infant characteristics and development, and the environment--this study found that center-care, in and of itself, adversely increased the likelihood of infants developing insecure attachment to their mothers as compared with infants who were either in maternal care, individual nonparental care with a relative, individual nonparental care with a paid caregiver, or family day-care. The results suggest that it is the poor quality of center-care and the high infant-caregiver ratio that accounted for this increased level of attachment insecurity among center-care infants.
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Sagi et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1d246e1e7099f69104f36e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-8624.00465
Abraham Sagi
Oranim Academic College of Education
Nina Koren‐Karie
University of Haifa
Motti Gini
University of Haifa
Child Development
University of Haifa
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