Houston Chronicle

Group-care facilities no place for children

- By Charles H. Zeanah and Carole Shauffer

Amid all the confusion about zero tolerance and executive orders over the crisis at the border, one thing is clear. At least 2,000 children are still detained away from their parents in shelters across the country. Many — no one knows exactly how many — are under age 5 housed in “tender age” shelters in South Texas. Government officials claim they are safe and well cared for, but nothing could be further from the truth. Years of research shows us that group care, is harmful to children of all ages and especially toxic for infants and young children.

Officials defend these facilities saying that shelters provide nutrition, hygiene and medical care. This isn’t enough. Children need consistent and individual­ized care from loving adults. Deprived of these experience­s, a young child’s developmen­t is derailed. Group care facilities, with constantly changing shift care staff, cannot provide this care even under the best of circumstan­ces.

Studies of children in institutio­ns show the long-lasting harm caused by these conditions. One of these, the Bucharest Early Interventi­on Project, provided definitive proof of difference­s in children being raised in institutio­ns to those removed and placed with families. Children in facilities lagged behind children in families as measured by IQ, language, growth, social abilities and serious emotional and behavioral problems. These children also were shown to have structural and functional changes in their brains that were associated with subsequent health and mental health difficulti­es. These effects of prolonged group care were still evident years after the children’s exposure to early institutio­nal rearing. The clear conclusion from this and related studies is that, for young children, individual­ized and committed caregiving that can only be provided by a family is essential for healthy brain developmen­t. The longer the child is subjected to these conditions, the greater the risk of long-term harm.

These young children at the border have had multiple traumatic experience­s, even before being separated from their parents. For young children, parents provide an essential protective shield to buffer them from the effects of trauma and help them maintain feelings of safety. Separating children from parents removes their most important protection while it inflicts additional trauma. Just when children need parents most, they are completely deprived of consistent caring relationsh­ips. And, as we have seen, this is not a short-term problem. Cumulative stressors and traumas substantia­lly increase risk for compromisi­ng their mental and physical health decades later. This is why at least 24 jurisdicti­ons severely restrict the use of group care for children who have been removed from their parents’ care because of abuse or neglect.

This situation is urgent. For policymake­rs, months may seem like no time at all. For young children, a week is an unimaginab­ly long period. Because of their developmen­tal stage, they will experience these separation­s as permanent and grieve as they would at the death of a parent. While these facilities are called shelters, experience has shown that, once public scrutiny ends, children spend weeks, months and even years in so-called shortterm facilities.

Any delay in reunifying these babies with their parents is unacceptab­le. Every day the likelihood that they will suffer long-term harm increases. The government must immediatel­y reunify these children and permanentl­y end the use of this kind of detention center for young children.

Zeanah is professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at the Tulane University School of Medicine. He also directs the Institute of Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health at Tulane. Shauffer is the senior director for strategic initiative­s at the Youth Law Center.

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