1.1.1
Use this guideline in conjunction with the NICE guidelines on looked-after children and young people and child maltreatment.
People have the right to be involved in discussions and make informed decisions about their care, as described in NICE's information on making decisions about your care.
Making decisions using NICE guidelines explains how we use words to show the strength (or certainty) of our recommendations, and has information about prescribing medicines (including off-label use), professional guidelines, standards and laws (including on consent and mental capacity), and safeguarding.
Use this guideline in conjunction with the NICE guidelines on looked-after children and young people and child maltreatment.
Ensure that all children, young people and their parents or carers get equal access to interventions for attachment difficulties, regardless of whether they:
are on the edge of care, accommodated under section 20 of the Children Act 1989, subject to a care order, under special guardianship or adopted from care
are placed with birth parents, foster carers (including kinship carers), special guardians or in residential care
are from a minority ethnic group
have a disability or a mental health problem
are from the UK or overseas.
Assess all children and young people who enter the UK as unaccompanied asylum-seeking children for attachment difficulties once a stable placement has been found, and offer interventions and support if needed. Take into account that, in addition to attachment difficulties, children and young people who enter the UK as unaccompanied asylum-seeking children are highly likely to have been traumatised, especially when coming from war zones. If they have post-traumatic stress disorder, offer treatment in line with the NICE guideline on post-traumatic stress disorder.
Ensure that the health, education and social care processes and structures surrounding children and young people with attachment difficulties are stable and consistent. This should include:
using a case management system to coordinate care and treatment
collaborative decision making among all health, education and social care professionals, the child or young person if possible and their parents and carers
having the same key worker, social worker, personal adviser or key person in school throughout the period the child or young person is in the care system or on the edge of care.
Ensure that the stability or instability of the child or young person's placement does not determine whether psychological interventions or other services are offered.
Ensure that, whenever possible, children and young people enter the care system in a planned manner rather than in response to a crisis.
Ensure that carers are ready to accept the child or young person's need to be in a loving relationship and are able and, whenever possible, willing to think about providing longer-term care or involvement if needed.
Help arrange kinship placements, if safe and in the best interest of the child or young person. See the Department for Education guidance on information sharing for people who provide safeguarding services to children, young people, parents and carers.
Consider comprehensive education and training for potential carers to prepare them for the challenges involved in looking after children and young people with attachment difficulties and the likely impact on them and their families.
Provide ongoing support and advice, either by telephone or in person, and proactively monitor difficulties in placements to identify opportunities to provide additional support, if there are significant attachment difficulties or if disruption to the placement is likely.
If a placement breaks down, aim to maintain the relationship between the child or young person and the foster carers (including kinship carers), adoptive parents or special guardians, whenever possible and if it is in the best interests of the child or young person.
Actively involve children and young people, and their parents or current carers, in the process of entering the care system or changing placement. This may include:
explaining the reasons for the move
familiarising the child or young person with their new carers and placement (for example, by arranging a pre‑placement visit or showing them photographs of their new carers and home)
providing ongoing support during transitions, such as face-to-face meetings, telephone conversations and other appropriate methods of communication
making sure the child or young person has the opportunity to ask questions and make choices whenever appropriate and possible
supporting the child or young person in maintaining relationships with their parents or previous carers unless this would not be in the child or young person's best interests
taking account of the needs of children at different ages and developmental stages, including needs related to their mental health and any physical disabilities.
If a return to the birth parents or original family is not an option, keep siblings together if it is possible and in the best interests of all the children or young people.
Offer additional support and resources (such as mentoring or day visits with a social worker) to children and young people and/or their carers:
at the first sign of serious difficulties in the placement or
if there have been frequent changes of placement or
if there is more than 1 child with attachment difficulties in the placement.
When adoption is considered the best outcome for the child or young person, ensure that:
their wishes are taken into account
they are offered information that is appropriate to their developmental level about the implications that adoption may have for future contact with their birth parents, siblings, wider family members and others
a full assessment of need is conducted before adoption
an assessment of attachment difficulties is offered at any stage after adoption
they are offered support (based on the assessment of need and attachment difficulties) before, during and after adoption.
Social care workers should offer children and young people in the care system, in special guardianship or adopted from care, accurate, comprehensive, up‑to‑date and age-appropriate information about their history and family in a form that they are able to use and revisit at their own pace (for example, through photographs and life story work in line with the NICE guideline on looked-after children and young people).
Social care workers should keep a record of the significant people and places in the child or young person's life while they are in the care system.
Ensure safeguarding is maintained during any intervention for a child or young person with attachment difficulties. See the Department for Education and Department of Health and Social Care statutory guidance on the planning, commissioning and delivery of health services for looked-after children.
Consider using a parental sensitivity tool (for example, the Ainsworth Maternal Sensitivity Scale) and a parenting quality tool with parents and carers to help guide decisions on interventions and to monitor progress.
Do not treat attachment difficulties with pharmacological interventions. For the use of pharmacological interventions for coexisting mental health problems, see for example, the NICE guideline on antisocial behaviour and conduct disorders in children and young people, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, depression in children and young people and alcohol-use disorders.
Schools and other education providers should ensure that all staff who may come into contact with children and young people with attachment difficulties receive appropriate training on attachment difficulties, as set out in recommendation 1.2.2.
Educational psychologists and health and social care provider organisations should work with local authority virtual school heads and designated teachers to develop and provide training courses for teachers of all levels on:
how attachment difficulties begin and how they can present in children and young people
how attachment difficulties affect learning, education and social development
understanding the consequences of maltreatment, including trauma
how they can support children and young people with attachment difficulties.
Children and young people with attachment difficulties, and their parents or carers, should be involved in the design of the training courses, wherever possible.
Staff in schools and other education settings and health and social care professionals should work together to ensure that children and young people with attachment difficulties:
can access mental health services for children and young people and education psychology services for interventions
are supported at school while they are taking part in interventions following advice from mental health services for children and young people and education psychology services.
When providing support for interventions in schools and education settings, staff should:
be aware of the possibility of stigma, bullying and labelling as a result of any absences from school
take into account the child or young person's preferences for the setting of the intervention.
Schools and other education providers should ensure that the designated teacher:
has had specialist training:
to recognise and understand attachment difficulties and mental health problems
in data protection and confidentiality
is aware of and keeps accurate and comprehensive records about all children and young people in their school who:
are in the care system
have been adopted or subject to special guardianship orders
have or may have attachment difficulties
has contact details for the parents, carers and health and social care professionals for all the above groups
maintains an up-to-date plan (a personal education plan for children and young people in the care system) setting out how they will be supported in school
provides a key person who can advocate for the child or young person and to whom the child or young person can go for support
allocates a safe place in school, for example, a room where a child or young person can go if they are distressed
attends looked-after children reviews
maintains an effective referral system with other agencies.
Social care professionals, schools and other education providers should ensure that changes or gaps in the education of children and young people in the care system are avoided by:
helping them to keep attending school when there are changes to their placements
supporting them while they develop new relationships and if they are worried about the new placement.
If a change is unavoidable, it should be planned in advance so that disruption is minimal.
Schools and other education providers should avoid using permanent and fixed-term school exclusion as far as possible for children and young people in the care system with identified attachment difficulties.
Health and social care provider organisations should train key workers, social care workers, personal advisers and post-adoption support social workers in the care system, as well as workers involved with children and young people on the edge of care, in:
recognising and assessing attachment difficulties and parenting quality, including parental sensitivity
recognising and assessing multiple socioeconomic factors (for example, low income, single or teenage parents) that together are associated with an increased risk of attachment difficulties
recognising and assessing other difficulties, including coexisting mental health problems and the consequences of maltreatment, including trauma
knowing when and how to refer for evidence-based interventions for attachment difficulties; see the sections on interventions for attachment difficulties in:
Health and social care professionals should offer a child or young person who may have attachment difficulties, and their parents or carers, a comprehensive assessment before any intervention, including:
personal factors, including the child or young person's attachment pattern and relationships
factors associated with the child or young person's placement, such as history of placement changes, access to respite and trusted relationships within the care system or school
the child or young person's educational experience and attainment
parental sensitivity
parental factors, including conflict between parents (such as domestic violence and abuse), parental drug and alcohol misuse or mental health problems, and parents' and carers' experiences of maltreatment and trauma in their own childhood
the child or young person's experience of maltreatment or trauma
the child or young person's physical health
coexisting mental health problems and neurodevelopmental conditions commonly associated with attachment difficulties, including antisocial behaviour and conduct disorders, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, autism, anxiety disorders (especially post-traumatic stress disorder), depression, alcohol misuse and emotional dysregulation.
Offer children and young people who have or may have attachment difficulties, and who also have a mental health problem or neurodevelopmental condition, interventions as recommended in the relevant NICE guideline (for example, the NICE guidelines on antisocial behaviour and conduct disorders in children and young people, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, depression in children and young people and alcohol-use disorders).
Consider using the following assessment tools to guide decisions on interventions for children and young people who have or may have attachment difficulties:
Strange Situation Procedure for children aged 1 to 2 years
modified versions of the Strange Situation Procedure for children aged 2 to 4 years (either the Cassidy Marvin Preschool Attachment Coding System or the Preschool Assessment of Attachment)
Attachment Q‑sort for children aged 1 to 4 years
Manchester Child Attachment Story Task, McArthur Story Stem Battery and Story Stem Assessment Profile for children aged 4 to 7 years
Child Attachment Interview for children and young people aged 7 to 15 years
Adult Attachment Interview for young people (aged 15 years and over) and their parents or carers.
See the table in appendix 1 for further information about these tools.
Health and social care provider organisations should ensure that health and social care professionals are skilled in the use of the assessment tools in recommendation 1.3.4.
Only diagnose an attachment disorder if a child or young person has attachment difficulties that meet diagnostic criteria as defined in the Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, 5th edition (DSM‑5; reactive attachment disorder and disinhibited social engagement disorder) or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on the international classification of diseases and related health problems, 10th revision (ICD‑10; reactive attachment disorder and disinhibited attachment disorder).
Do not offer genetic screening (including measuring specific gene polymorphisms) in children and young people to predict or identify attachment difficulties.
If, following assessment of attachment difficulties, an intervention is required, refer the child or young person, and their parents or carers, to a service that:
has specialist expertise in attachment difficulties in children and young people and their parents or carers
works with other services, including mental health services for children and young people, education and social care
actively involves children and young people with attachment difficulties in staff training programmes.
This section covers children and young people with attachment difficulties (or at risk of attachment difficulties) who currently live with their birth parents or original family and who are at high risk of entering or re‑entering the care system. It also covers children and young people who have been maltreated or are at high risk of being maltreated (see recommendations 1.4.9, 1.4.10 and 1.4.12).
Health and social care professionals should offer a video feedback programme to the parents of preschool-age children on the edge of care to help them:
improve how they nurture their child, including when the child is distressed
improve their understanding of what their child's behaviour means
respond positively to cues and expressions of the child's feelings
behave in ways that are not frightening to the child
improve mastery of their own feelings when nurturing the child.
Ensure video feedback programmes are delivered in the parental home by a trained health or social care worker who has experience of working with children and young people and:
consist of 10 sessions (each lasting at least 60 minutes) over 3 to 4 months
include filming the parents interacting with their child for 10 to 20 minutes every session
include the health or social care worker watching the video with the parents to:
highlight parental sensitivity, responsiveness and communication
highlight parental strengths
acknowledge positive changes in the behaviour of the parents and child.
If there is little improvement to parental sensitivity or the child's attachment after 10 sessions of a video feedback programme for parents of preschool-age children on the edge of care, arrange a multi-agency review before going ahead with more sessions or other interventions.
If parents do not want to take part in a video feedback programme, offer parental sensitivity and behaviour training to help them:
understand their child's behaviour
improve their responsiveness to their child's needs
manage difficult behaviour.
Ensure parental sensitivity and behaviour training:
first consists of a single session with the parents followed by at least 5 (and up to 15) weekly or fortnightly parent–child sessions (lasting 60 minutes) over a 6‑month period
is delivered by a trained health or social care professional
includes:
coaching the parents in behavioural management (not applicable for children aged 0 to 18 months) and limit setting
reinforcing sensitive responsiveness
ways to improve parenting quality
homework to practise applying new skills.
If parents do not want to take part in a video feedback programme or parental sensitivity and behaviour training, or, if there is little improvement to parental sensitivity or the child's attachment after either intervention and there are still concerns, arrange a multi-agency review before going ahead with more interventions.
If the multi-agency review concludes that further intervention is appropriate, consider a home visiting programme to improve parenting skills delivered by an appropriately trained lay home visitor or a healthcare professional such as a nurse.
Ensure home visiting programmes:
consist of 12 weekly or monthly sessions (lasting 30 to 90 minutes) over an 18‑month period
include observing the child (not using video) with their parents
give the parents advice about how they can improve their communication and relationship with their child by:
supporting positive parent–child interaction using role modelling
reinforcing positive interactions and parental empathy
provide parental education and guidance about child development.
Consider parent–child psychotherapy for parents who have maltreated or are at risk of maltreating their child to improve attachment difficulties, ensuring that safeguarding concerns are addressed.
Ensure parent–child psychotherapy to improve attachment difficulties:
is based on the Cicchetti et al. (2006) and Toth et al. (2002) model
consists of weekly sessions (lasting 45 to 60 minutes) over 1 year
is delivered in the parents' home by a therapist trained in the intervention
directly observes the child and the parent–child interaction
explores the parents' understanding of the child's behaviour
explores the relationship between the emotional reactions of the parents and perceptions of the child, and the parents' own childhood experiences.
Consider parental sensitivity and behaviour training for parents of primary and secondary school-age children and young people (as described in recommendation 1.4.5) to improve attachment difficulties, adapting the intervention for the age of the child or young person.
For children and young people who have been maltreated, and show signs of trauma or post-traumatic stress disorder, offer trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapy, and other interventions in line with the NICE guideline on post-traumatic stress disorder.
Consider parental sensitivity and behaviour training (as described in recommendation 1.4.5) for parents at risk of maltreating their child to improve attachment difficulties, ensuring that safeguarding concerns are addressed and adapting the intervention for the age of the child or young person.
This section covers children and young people with attachment difficulties (or at risk of attachment difficulties) who are in the care system, subject to special guardianship orders or adopted from care; it also covers their foster carers (including kinship carers), special guardians and adoptive parents.
Health and social care professionals should offer a video feedback programme to foster carers, special guardians and adoptive parents, as described in recommendation 1.4.2.
If there is little improvement to parental sensitivity or the child's attachment after 10 sessions of a video feedback programme for foster carers, special guardians and adoptive parents of preschool-age children, arrange a multi-agency review before going ahead with more sessions or other interventions.
If foster carers, special guardians or adoptive parents do not want to take part in a video feedback programme, offer parental sensitivity and behaviour training as described in recommendation 1.4.5.
Consider intensive training and support for foster carers, special guardians and adoptive parents (see recommendations 1.5.5 and 1.5.6) before the placement and for 9 to 12 months after, combined with group therapeutic play sessions for the child for the same duration (see recommendation 1.5.7).
Ensure intensive training for foster carers, special guardians and adoptive parents includes:
positive behavioural management methods
help with peer and parent or carer relationships for the child
support for schoolwork
help to defuse conflict.
Ensure intensive support for foster carers, special guardians and adoptive parents includes:
supervision by daily telephone contact
weekly support group meetings
a 24-hour crisis intervention telephone line.
Ensure group therapeutic play sessions for primary school-age children after placement:
consist of weekly sessions (lasting 60 to 90 minutes) over the 9‑ to 12‑month period
are delivered by a trained health or social care professional
include monitoring of behavioural, social and developmental progress.
Consider a group-based training and education programme for foster carers, special guardians and adoptive parents to maintain stability in the home and help transition to a new school environment (see recommendation 1.5.9), combined with a group-based training and education programme for late primary and early secondary school-age children and young people in the care system, subject to special guardianship orders and adopted from care to improve social skills and maintain positive peer relationships (see recommendation 1.5.10).
Ensure group-based training and education programmes for foster carers, special guardians and adoptive parents:
consist of twice-weekly sessions (lasting 60 to 90 minutes) in a group for the first 3 weeks, then weekly sessions over the remaining school year
are delivered by a trained facilitator
have a behavioural reinforcement system to encourage adaptive behaviours across home, school and community settings
provide weekly telephone support if needed
give homework to practise applying new skills.
Ensure training and education programmes for late primary and early secondary school-age children and young people in the care system, subject to special guardianship orders and adopted from care:
consist of twice-weekly sessions (lasting 60 to 90 minutes) in a group for the first 3 weeks, then individual weekly sessions over the remaining school year
are delivered by trained mentors, which may include graduate level workers, at a time that ensures schooling is not disrupted
teach skills to help reduce involvement with peers who may encourage misbehaviour, and to increase their levels of self-confidence
encourage them to get involved in a range of educational, social, cultural and recreational activities
help them develop a positive outlook.
Modify interventions for young people in the care system, subject to special guardianship orders and adopted from care when needed to allow for:
physical and sexual development
transition to adolescence
re‑awakening of emotions about their birth parents or original family.
Take into account that these factors can complicate therapeutic interventions and relationships with foster carers, special guardians and adoptive parents. Discuss making contact with their birth parents or original family sensitively.
Professionals with expertise in attachment difficulties should:
work with the residential staff group and identify any key attachment figures to work specifically with the child or young person in residential care
offer parental sensitivity and behaviour training adapted for professional carers in residential care.
Ensure parental sensitivity and behaviour training for professional carers:
first consists of a single session with the carers followed by at least 5 (and up to 15) weekly or fortnightly carer–child sessions (lasting 60 minutes) over 6 months
is delivered by a trained health or social care professional
includes:
coaching the residential carers in behavioural management (for children aged 0 to 18 months) and limit setting
reinforcing sensitive responsiveness
ways to improve caring quality
homework to practise applying new skills.
Modify interventions for young people in residential care when needed to allow for:
physical and sexual development
transition to adolescence
re-awakening of emotions about their birth parents or original family.
Take into account that these factors can complicate therapeutic interventions and relationships with professional carers. Discuss making contact with their birth parents or original family sensitively.
A foster carer, professional carer in residential care, special guardian or kinship carer.
Aged 0 to 12 years.
A teacher who must be appointed by the governing body of all maintained schools, as set out in the Children and Young Persons Act 2008, to promote the educational achievement of looked-after children. Academies, with their funding agreement with the Secretary of State, are also required to appoint a designated teacher for looked-after children.
This covers children and young people who are considered by social care workers to be at high risk of going into care (for example, because of maltreatment, parental mental health problems or parental substance misuse). This includes those currently living with their birth parents or original family (such as step-parents), and those adopted from care but who are at high risk of returning to care.
The placement of a child or young person with a foster carer, who may or may not be related to the child or young person. This might be an emergency, short-term or long-term placement in a private family home.
This covers all children and young people looked after by a local authority, including those subject to care orders under section 31 of the Children Act 1989 and those provided with accommodation under section 20.
Care provided by adults who have a relationship with or connection to the child or young person, including grandparents, siblings, aunts, uncles, godparents or step-grandparents. Kinship care includes children and young people living in an informal arrangement, looked after by the local authority and placed with kinship foster carers, or in an arrangement planned to lead to adoption by a relative or friend.
A child is looked after by a local authority if they have been provided with accommodation for a continuous period of more than 24 hours (in the circumstances set out in sections 20 and 21 of the Children Act 1989), or placed in the care of a local authority by virtue of an order made under part 4 of the Act.
This is physical, sexual or emotional abuse or neglect.
A birth parent, adoptive parent or step-parent who has parental responsibility for a child or young person.
Someone who is responsible, as set out in Children (Leaving Care) (England) Regulations 2001, for making sure that children and young people receive care and support from appropriate services when they leave the care system. They provide advice and support to the child or young person, are involved in preparing a 'pathway plan' (covering health and development, education training and employment, contact with parents, wider family and friends and managing finances), and are responsible for keeping it up to date.
A home environment, whether in a family or residential setting, which may be temporary or permanent for a child or young person who is either voluntarily, or by order of a court, 'looked after' or placed with a view to adoption by a local authority.
A social worker or family support worker who is employed by local authorities and other regulated adoption agencies to assess adoption support needs when requested by an adopted child, their adoptive parents or former guardians, and who provides appropriate services if needed.
Care provided under the Children Act 1989 in a children's home run by a local authority, voluntary or private provider, where 1 or more children or young people are cared for by a team of employed staff.
A multi-agency action to protect children from maltreatment, prevent the impairment of their health and development, ensure that they grow up in circumstances consistent with the provision of safe and effective care, and actively enable all children to have the best outcomes.
Under the Children Act 1989, amended by the Adoption and Children Act 2002, special guardianship is a legally secure placement for children and young people who cannot live with their birth parents that confers parental responsibility on the special guardian.
An officer who must be appointed by local authorities, as set out in the Children and Families Act 2014, who ensures that the authority properly carries out its duty to promote the educational achievement of its looked-after children.
Aged 13 to 17 years.