TY - JOUR
T1 - Practitioner Review
T2 - Clinical insights from attachment theory and research for professionals working with young children and their families
AU - Opie, Jessica E.
AU - Waters, Everett
AU - Duschinsky, Robbie
AU - Hammarlund, Mårten
AU - Madigan, Sheri
AU - Foster, Sarah
AU - Forslund, Tommie
AU - Thompson, Ross
AU - Steele, Howard
AU - Steele, Miriam
AU - Roisman, Glenn I.
AU - Groh, Ashley M.
AU - Fonagy, Peter
AU - Dagan, Or
AU - Talia, Alessandro
AU - Rossen, Larissa
AU - Sroufe, L. Alan
AU - Tronick, Ed
AU - Fearon, R. M.Pasco
AU - Granqvist, Pehr
AU - Sagi-Schwartz, Abraham
AU - Lieberman, Alicia
AU - Carlson, Elizabeth
AU - Zimmermann, Peter
AU - Dozier, Mary
AU - Wazana, Ashley
AU - Belsky, Jay
AU - Shaver, Phillip R.
AU - Cicchetti, Dante
AU - Bosmans, Guy
AU - Schuengel, Carlo
AU - Grossmann, Karin
AU - Cyr, Chantal
AU - Dubois-Comtois, Karine
AU - Verhage, Marije
AU - Tharner, Anne
AU - Oosterman, Mirjam
AU - Allen, Brian
AU - Crowell, Judith A.
AU - Vrtička, Pascal
AU - Woolgar, Matthew
AU - Raby, K. Lee
AU - Galbally, Megan
AU - Holmes, Jeremy
AU - Marvin, Robert S.
AU - van IJzendoorn, Marinus H.
AU - Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 The Author(s). Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.
PY - 2026/5
Y1 - 2026/5
N2 - Attachment theory, with its core concepts, perspectives, and insights developed over the past five decades, is influential for professionals working with young children. However, practitioners face challenges translating attachment theory and research into practical applications. This manifests in attachment myths, theoretical misinterpretations, and inconsistency of application. This state-of-the-art review is authored by 47 attachment researchers and practitioners and examines key insights from attachment theory to facilitate attachment-aware practice for professionals working with children and their caregivers. Following the ongoing debate on practical relevance in attachment theory, we present both ‘strict’ and ‘expansive’ translational perspectives on applications for addressing preventative or clinical attachment concerns. We first review core attachment propositions, based on replicated research of attachment and caregiving. We next address common misconceptions that hinder adequate practical applications. We present measures of attachment and sensitive parenting that might be helpful for practitioners. We also review evidence-based and promising attachment interventions, discussing core components of (preventative) support for parents or caregivers and the children in their care. We emphasize that attachment theory's clinical value lies not in assigning attachment classifications, but rather in understanding crucial insights into caregiving and early socioemotional development (e.g., secure base phenomena; the value of safe, stable, and shared good-enough care), developed in attachment research over the past 50 years, that may inform policy and clinical reasoning and areas for prevention and intervention.
AB - Attachment theory, with its core concepts, perspectives, and insights developed over the past five decades, is influential for professionals working with young children. However, practitioners face challenges translating attachment theory and research into practical applications. This manifests in attachment myths, theoretical misinterpretations, and inconsistency of application. This state-of-the-art review is authored by 47 attachment researchers and practitioners and examines key insights from attachment theory to facilitate attachment-aware practice for professionals working with children and their caregivers. Following the ongoing debate on practical relevance in attachment theory, we present both ‘strict’ and ‘expansive’ translational perspectives on applications for addressing preventative or clinical attachment concerns. We first review core attachment propositions, based on replicated research of attachment and caregiving. We next address common misconceptions that hinder adequate practical applications. We present measures of attachment and sensitive parenting that might be helpful for practitioners. We also review evidence-based and promising attachment interventions, discussing core components of (preventative) support for parents or caregivers and the children in their care. We emphasize that attachment theory's clinical value lies not in assigning attachment classifications, but rather in understanding crucial insights into caregiving and early socioemotional development (e.g., secure base phenomena; the value of safe, stable, and shared good-enough care), developed in attachment research over the past 50 years, that may inform policy and clinical reasoning and areas for prevention and intervention.
KW - Attachment myths
KW - Attachment-informed interventions
KW - Clinical translation
KW - Early childhood
KW - Parenting
KW - Parent–child relationships
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105031159683
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105031159683#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1111/jcpp.70126
DO - 10.1111/jcpp.70126
M3 - Review article
C2 - 41736561
AN - SCOPUS:105031159683
SN - 0021-9630
VL - 67
SP - 723
EP - 739
JO - Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines
JF - Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines
IS - 5
ER -