Why Personality Problems Occur In Placement Children?


📹 How foster care placements can harm a child’s brain

Video by James Wooldridge, Eric Adler and Neil Nakahodo Links to all the stories in the Throwaway Kids series: Part One of Six: …


How do children develop personality disorders?

The extant research indicates that genetics, abuse, and other factors contribute to the development of personality disorders such as obsessive-compulsive disorder, narcissistic personality disorder, and other conditions. Previously, individuals diagnosed with personality disorders were often perceived as lacking motivation or exhibiting malevolent tendencies. However, recent research is shedding light on potential etiological factors, including genetics, parenting styles, and peer influences.

What kind of childhood trauma causes BPD?

Trauma, such as physical or sexual abuse, emotional neglect, abandonment, or other hardships during childhood, can significantly contribute to the development of Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). BPD is a mental illness that affects an individual’s feelings about themselves and others, making it difficult to control emotions and manage behavior. It leads to intense emotions, poor self-image, and impulsivity, causing problems in everyday life and difficulty in maintaining friendships and relationships. A person with BPD may avoid abandonment, display inappropriate anger, or experience ongoing feelings of emptiness.

What kind of parenting creates BPD?
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What kind of parenting creates BPD?

The study aimed to summarize the evidence on the relationship between parenting and personality disorder, particularly borderline personality disorder (BPD). It conducted an overview of systematic reviews that assessed individuals with personality disorder pathology for experiences of maladaptive parenting, compared to psychiatric or healthy comparisons/controls, and the impact on psychopathological and relational outcomes. The majority of studies reported outcomes related to BPD, and study design, methodology, and quality varied.

Out of the eight systematic reviews, 211 primary studies, of which 140 met eligibility criteria for inclusion, were included in the overview. Most studies focused on borderline personality pathology, with study design and methodology also varying. Overall, five systematic reviews found that maladaptive parenting was a psychosocial risk factor for the development of BPD, and three studies found that borderline personality pathology was associated with maladaptive parenting and negative offspring and parenting-offspring outcomes. This research aims to assist clinical decision-makers in translating this research into clinical policy and practice.

Why does trauma cause personality disorders?
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Why does trauma cause personality disorders?

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a mental health issue affecting at least 1. 6% of American adults. It is a mental illness that affects an individual’s ability to control their emotions, leading to impulsive behaviors, poorly developed relationships, and poor self-esteem. Early trauma, such as physical or sexual abuse, emotional neglect, or being abandoned, can trigger BPD later in life. BPD affects a person’s feelings about themselves and others, making it difficult to control emotions and manage behavior.

This can result in intense emotions, poor self-image, and impulsivity, leading to serious problems in everyday life and difficulty in maintaining friendships and relationships. Further research is needed to better understand the relationship between trauma and BPD.

What are the causes of personality disorders?

Personality disorders are believed to be caused by a combination of genetics and early environmental influences, such as childhood experiences like abuse or neglect. Pregnancy and becoming a parent can also contribute to personality disorders. Individuals with these disorders may require additional support during and after childbirth, which can be sought from a GP, midwife, or health visitor.

Why do children develop disorders?
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Why do children develop disorders?

Developmental disorders are impairments in a child’s physical, cognitive, language, or behavioral development that can impact everyday functioning and usually last throughout a person’s lifetime. They can affect physical abilities like vision and mental abilities like learning, and can affect multiple body parts or systems. Early identification and intervention can significantly impact a child’s ability to learn new skills and reduce the need for costly interventions over time.

MaineHealth providers are committed to monitoring and screening patients to provide the early intervention they need, as developmental disorders can take a toll on an individual’s physical, intellectual, and emotional growth.

What are the causes of personality development?
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What are the causes of personality development?

A personality disorder is a mental health condition where individuals have a lifelong pattern of self-perception and reactions that cause problems. People with personality disorders often struggle with understanding emotions, tolerating distress, and acting impulsively. This can lead to serious issues, affecting family life, social activities, work and school performance, and overall quality of life.

Symptoms may be subtle, as the person may not realize they have a disorder because their thoughts and behaviors seem natural to them or they believe others are responsible for their challenges. Understanding and managing these traits is crucial for a successful life.

Why do children develop BPD?

Environmental factors are prevalent among individuals diagnosed with bipolar disorder (BPD). These factors include a history of abuse, prolonged exposure to fear or distress during childhood, neglect by parents, and growing up with a family member who has a serious mental health condition, such as bipolar disorder, or a substance misuse problem.

When do personality disorders develop?

A personality disorder is a pattern of behavior and inner experiences that deviates significantly from cultural expectations, causes distress or problems, and lasts over time. It typically begins in late adolescence or early adulthood and can be long-lasting without treatment. The DSM-5-TR identifies 10 specific types of personality disorders, which affect at least two areas: thinking about oneself and others, emotional response, relating to others, and controlling behavior.

What causes personality to develop?
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What causes personality to develop?

Social cognitive theory suggests that personality formation occurs when individuals observe others’ behaviors, leading to adaptation and assimilation, especially if those behaviors are rewarded. It bridges the gap between behavior and cognition-focused personality theories. Kim provides insights into the real-world applications of psychoanalytic, humanistic, trait, and social cognitive theories in psychology.

Psychoanalytic theory encourages clinicians to focus on past and under-the-surface aspects of treatment, while humanistic theory encourages a present-focused approach. Trait theory is useful for studying personality in the scientific context, while social cognitive theory informs researchers on how situations can cause personality inconsistencies.


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Why Personality Problems Occur In Placement Children
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Rae Fairbanks Mosher

I’m a mother, teacher, and writer who has found immense joy in the journey of motherhood. Through my blog, I share my experiences, lessons, and reflections on balancing life as a parent and a professional. My passion for teaching extends beyond the classroom as I write about the challenges and blessings of raising children. Join me as I explore the beautiful chaos of motherhood and share insights that inspire and uplift.

About me

31 comments

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  • As an adult who aged out of the Foster system I can tell you personally that 9 out of 10 homes are bad full of trauma and abuse of every form not just from the parents but from the other children that belong to those parents I.e the non foster children. I’m so glad that this article has been made but sadly it’s not enough coverage, no one ever wants to talk about it even though EVERYONE knows that it’s a serious problem and that all these children are growing up traumatized and unable to ask for help because adults won’t listen to them. After about the 5th family I stopped telling child services about what was happening to me and each of these families because child services didn’t do anything. There were many times a teacher or another adult outside of the home called the cops and reported the abuse and still nothing got done!!

  • At 8 years old, I got taken for no reason, the letter came to my parents years later saying the social services had no authority to take me away. I suffered because child services took me for the money…its sad to say…I didn’t get adopted till 16 and then at 17 I got kicked out by my foster mom…I’m 19 and still hurting

  • Complex PTSD that’s what foster care will do to you I lived in 15 different foster homes moved back home several times during that process just to go back to a foster home fight or flight you live in constant fear of survival your emotions are changed either extremely angry or extremely sad not much in the middle like most people your emotions don’t swing very far between the two but when you grow up in foster care your thermostat is broken it doesn’t stay at 72° its wings from below zero to over 100° without much in the middle story of my life

  • I have really come to believe that group homes, in an orphanage style, are much better that the foster care system in the US and Canada. Children that grow up in group homes have more stability. They can grow attached to peers, carers, teachers… their new beds, new smells, tastes, etc… They are not moved time after time, and if they get to go back to their family and then placed back into de system, at least they get to go back to the same place, the same people they are already attached to.

  • My parents died at a young age. My dad died from a heart attack and mom from cancer, I was 9. My whole life changed. I stayed with my Oma (Grandma) but not because of her I had to move back to Australia. Long story cut I was an angry child and family couldn’t deal with my emotions. I don’t blame my relatives I was a devil child. I then went from refuge to refuge and finally I found a home…. 5 yrs later I was set free at 18 yrs old. Life was crazy after that I had many crazy times but I also found a love for music. If not for poetry I think I wouldn’t be here today. My biggest advise is that ITS NEVER TO LATE TO FIND YOURSELF. It’s never to late to feel you finally found your ground. I’m 38 now and its taking me a long time of dealing with anger, lost, insecurity, fear and all that comes with feeling abandoned. It’s never to late. Show kindness and show the world your energy ❤️ you’re not alone. Big Hugs xxx

  • My mom dropped me in the system at 6 and I spent the 90s in psychiatric placements. All I can say is I’m glad they never put me in foster care. I saw kids go to those families and come back after only a few months so much more screwed up in the head than they were when they left. And the places I was in were really bad.

  • I’m now out of foster care but many of my households were horrible to live in, many I experienced both types of abuse, neglect and worst one for me personally was losing my little brother due to the carelessness of my foster parents at the time. However the final household I’m in now and have lived in for 12 years and am now adopted by them I truely feel like I’ve won the lottery because the chances of having amazing parents is extremely low and not every other foster child will have the same experience, it’s the sad reality of foster care 🙁

  • I’ve spent my teenage years in the foster system (thankfully out now) and I’ve come out worse than I already was. I’m always depressed and anxious and on high-alert and it’s horrible. I once asked my social worker for therapy and the school and my foster family told her I was faking being mentally ill to avoid doing school work. I waited for almost a year to get therapy only to then find out after I’d left the system, that I wasn’t actually on the waiting list for therapy at all because I was supposedly faking. I never trusted social services from the start and I only trusted them less after that.

  • There was a person i knew who was chronically homeless, we had been friends for many years and one day while we were walking our dogs I asked ” when was the last time you had a real stable home, not a tent or a rv but like a actual home where you felt safe and grounded that you lived in?” She had to think about it and then she said idk I don’t think I ever had that before. I had know she was in foster care and had a troubled relationship with her family, she alway seemed to make really bad decisions even decisions that I thought would be simple or obvious, this article really helps me understand her thought process a bit better. She is a good person, even though she was homeless she was always willing to help me when I needed her to and she wasn’t a thief or a untrustworthy person she just was someone who made terrible life choices because she wasn’t taught any better, sadly we lost touch after I moved but I think about her every now and again

  • I was in 23 foster ” homes”. The people in these “homes” were rotten. 1 decent one and that didn’t work out either. When they couldn’t find a “home” to put me in they locked me up in juvenile hall. Thank God “diagnosing” and drugs weren’t a very big thing at that time. Except Ritalin which might explain alot. Poor girl having to deal with all the bs of government, foster “homes”, AND the utter nonsense of false diagnosis and life ruining drugs. Not to mention missing the good and real life she needs and deserves. Like every other kid should have. The foster system is evil. They are scum. All I ever wanted to do was go home.

  • i was taken at about the age of 1 and no it wasn’t to abuse or anything it was that my bio mother could have kids and my little sister was the limit. I have been through like 6 homes and i have been with the 6th home for a long time from when i was about 2. I’m now 14 and i was told all this when i was about 10 and that is when my life turned around. I don’t want this to look like attention or anything i just felt that this article related so much for me.

  • As a 19 year old who is now currently back at my Mother’s house I still feel depressed and anxious because my mother has been messed up by the system and so have I and she has gotten toxic since I came back. Our relationship has been destroyed. It is crazy. The foster mother I have is no help and she is loving and has been good to me. This is the third home I’ve been in to that was good to me but it was just time to move on. I didn’t like it there as much it got boring and depressing there.

  • From age 1 to 6 the abuse by parents and then put in Foster Care abused by potential Foster Care parents who want money and use this system to do so with no care for the children they take in. This is how my Complex Post Traumatic Disorder started. It only got worse and even after being adopted. My brother and I were dumb downed, shamed, and treated like embarrassment black sheep that added on to the emotional and psychological abuse and they still act like they aren’t part of the reason I have CPTSD. Then I was bulled physically, psychologically and emotionally in school, teachers turned a blind eye after all that I lost faith and trust in all people and became numb to this world and the people in my life for not protecting and being there for me. 39 years late sounds, smells and people who resemble or part of the cause for my Complex Post Traumatic Disorder I have panic attacks, night terrors and CPTSD attacks and its been an up hill battle to get through each week as a Survivor of CPTSD. I’d never wish anyone child to go through what I did. People think something is wrong with you for having PTSD/CPTSD when they refuse to understand humans were the cause all these 39 years. I have fear of triggers going outside of my house cause of it, its destroyed my ability to work and feel safe going anywhere outside of home where lots of people are its not fair to me and other kids who suffer this at early childhood and teen years that could have all been prevented. Adults are the key in preventing PTSD/CPTSD of a child as they grow up.

  • Now we have had 2 babies girls that we have had since June of 2020. One was 12 months other was 2 months. Mom on meth, dad not in picture, kids tested positive for meth and pot. Well both parents have not done anything no jobs, no classes, got no house, mom in motels, dad lives with parents cause he supposedly slow in the head. Dad on parole, failed every drug test past 17 months, hair folicle and urine. Mother had failed first few than clean but she was only doing urine, judge said do hair folicle well she passed urine failed folicle high doses of pot and cocaine in her system and she 7 months pregnant again, so never learned, the dad has another girl pregnant as well and her kids removed from her due to abuse by cps. The dad dontvwant baby said no bond with her he only want the older daughter mad that clear whole time including our last 2 court hearing most recent being month ago. The grandpa has 2 counts of terrorism threats, 4 threats with a gun, 3 accounts of trying to run over the babies mother, there home got denied home study due to his violent history and said girls can not live there. But yet here we are judge recommended over night visits unsupervised 2 times a week with the dad and his parents. Month in to this, the older one is beating up on the baby, she has came home, cuts, brusies, a knot on her little head, comes to us dirty, starving and thirsty, she literally stuffs her mouth and chokes on food and water first day back with us from visits, the older one is feed, in clean clothes,hair done up.

  • Why not focus on what causes the original instability to begin with. Adoptees and foster kids beget more foster kids and adoptees. So if you find ways to heal these families and actually enforce child support and give adoptees a national cost of living stipend to compensate for the income disparity between us and people who actually had stability from egg to 18. Then you don’t have nearly as many foster situations at all.

  • One of my friends who’s a guy, got married to someone who grew out of the foster care system and over time she has blocked every person from his family and friends, told lies about them. It’s gotten so bad that she randomly blocked me. So I came here to understand why she would do that. She probably has abandonment issues, and maybe she thinks someone will steal the only person who actually loves her? I’m still learning. I want to make sure my friend is safe with her because that’s toxic to tell someone who they can and can’t be around, or else.. anyone got any ideas? I’m trying to learn and be patient.

  • I lived in the system for a year and a half when I was 14 and 15. Before I was sent to live with family out of state. In that year and a half I was in 22 homes 18 of which I was abused bye the foster parents and or their kids I reported most of them however there was never an investigation in to any of my reports except for the 1st one. The social workers would rather send you to a new home rather then have to deal with potentially losing a home as there are not enough foster home for the number of kids in the system and they don’t feel they can afford to Lose even one. Most faster parents are not the good people that the ordinary public makes them out to be I have seen it first hand. The system set theses kids up to fail in life from not financially supporting them when I ago out leading them to live on the streets and not being able to get an education. Some employers won’t even hire a foster child witch makes it even harder when we age out. To all the foster children in the system and those that have found a loving family or have aged out I am praying for you all and wish you the best of luck in life. You are all my brothers sisters of the system see you on the flip side.

  • I got taken from my loving and caring parents. social services had no right in taking me and my siblings away. They were a few niggles but not enough to warrant me being taken and in the manner they did. Physically dragging me away from my parents and put into the back of a strangers car and being told to live with a complete stranger. They saw a good very close family and decided to tear it to shreds, my siblings are still in the system and even though I’m with my biological parents again I still struggle to accept what has happened. I can relate to a lot of people here and hope we can all recover somehow.

  • According to study results, mothers who lost custody of a child to foster care experienced significantly higher rates of depression, substance use, physician visits for mental illness, and prescriptions of psychotropic medications compared to mothers surviving the death of a child. Interpreting these results, authors suggest the disproportionate share of mental health burden among women with children in foster care is likely a reflection of lower social support and a lack of social acknowledgment of grief following this form of loss.

  • I think I do know the feeling I was abandoned at 5:00 I was raised in the office but the process of me getting to the orphanage I had to say with a social worker for about two weeks I guess until they found the placement for me it was supposed to have been a Christian home I went through terrible abuse you name it we went through it and I was raised with close to 180 kids we all were damaged but if there’s any consolation of this those people are in hell today.

  • Take my son from school knowing I’m not letting them take him and he would fight to the death to take him away from his mama. They didnt even ask if he had medication? Which they already knew and documented. Especially when reason was er visit from school when teacher thought his panic attack was a seizure and called 911. Bcus against his IEP he was taking a test without assistance as another fight broke out in his classroom. …. I can write a book about his abuse…

  • I was put in care age 7 i believe? I started moving within family age 3 though. I sufferd neglect, abuse and i have autism. Im now at an age where im processing my trauma and its really difficult becuase i get in trouble for being upset and i hzve ti just pretend im ok. Honestly, most ofthe time i just want to kms.

  • I was in care and you believe what they did to me isolated me from the world I wasn’t allowed a girl friend I would have to leave my house get the bus 45mins to Edinburgh thn time the next bus well coach for just under 5 hours to fort William thn the man who was ment to be looking after me he would drive me another hour to his island yeah island then I had to get a boat well his boat to the other side of the loch to where he lived it totally messed with my head and I had to do this every week I felt like I was so different to everyone not good enough and totally failed by the system if you want to know more if I get enough views say 5 or more I will continue to expose the truth I have loads of trauma and all I wanted was just to be normal❤and peace out guys

  • As a child diagnosed with a form of this (compulsive attachment disorder) this is still very accurate along with the causes and symptoms. Sadly since mine is a compulsive disorder I don’t realise what the disorder causes me to do and I end up blaming myself for whatever I do. I know that I have it but that’s about all that I know.

  • There are pros and cons to this disorder, I’m noticed I’d be more suitable for high emotional and high intensity situations where I can look at it objectively, but in relationships it’s really hard because I look at everything without emotions and it hurts me to see that I’m hurting others emotionally and I can’t do nothing about it it’s all inside in my mind.

  • RAD caused me to live my life outside of the normality of society. I seemed pretty normal to those around me but actually I had to work hard to cope with societies expectations. RAD for me was very destructive to things that society values, like assets, connections, sense of community, so even though I had good jobs, I never connected or felt I belonged to anything or anywhere. Now i’m over 50 and was only diagnosed a few years ago, because I guess when I was a kid it wasn’t a thing. Now I’m screwed.

  • I was diagnosed with RAD over 30 years ago. (At that time, “pseudo-autism” was used instead of RAD) My mother said that some autism-like symptoms emerged when I was one or two years old. She said, I prefered to be alone and didn’t try to join in interactive games. I got some therapies like language therapy and I still have debris of memories during the period. I managed to recover just before primary school, but I had some difficulties making friends. I had been regarded as an introvert person for a long time because of the “illusion” of RAD, but I’m not that kind of person. I could recover in early age, but the illusion was “persistent”. It led to overinterference and misunderstanding.

  • Explains the black community in a nutshell. But then again if they were raised with healthy emotional bonds they wouldn’t make proper canon fodder for the prison system, either. So it wouldn’t do the state or the government much good then for them to be raised as normal as possible. Just the total opposite, in fact.

  • That explains why i never had an emotional bond with my bio mom i always thought i was in Foster care and couldn’t remember her is what i thought the problem was my paperwork said i had signs of neglect, abuse (Verbal, sexual, and physical abuse.) Now days i still have a hard time showing emotion when its at a appropriate time or struggling to show Empathy.

  • I’m 90% sure this ‘RAD’ is just entirely made up, like I’m pretty sure children can form relationships outside of those with their parents? Them not being attracted to their parents wouldn’t mean they automatically have trust issues, are unaware of others needs/feelings or are unable to form healthy relationships, BUT if a child is abused by their parents that will cause them to not be as attached to said parent, because y’know that’s how abuse normally works. If an adult they’re meant to rely on abuses them this can result in the listed symptoms of RAD. basically my point is that ‘RAD’ is just symptoms of a child being abused/traumatized.

  • I am a survivor of attachment therapy. I was a ward of the state of Washington for 16 years. I was diagnosed RAD at 6 and was in therapy until I finally escaped by running away at the age of 14. They used forced restraint, food control, physical and verbal abuse, sleep deprivation, forced indoctrination, confusion isolation along with many other barbaric techniques. While I had mental issues the way to help me form attachment or to teach me how to trust was not to spend the whole of my childhood terrorizing me on every level they could think possible. This diagnosis is an excuse for sadistic therapist to torture/break children and traffic them . It has taken me most of my natural life to try heal what they did to me in the name of mental health.i found out recently that this method is still wildly practiced and I want to find a way to stop it. There have been deaths from this practice as recently as 2020. Today I am 42 and I still struggle but I am a survivor.

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