Institutional Autism and the adopted child from Russia
By: George Rogu M.D. of Adoptiondoctors.com
Many children who are available for international adoption
have either been placed in hospital-run orphanage or a
classic institutional care setting for a multitude of
reasons. These reasons range can from illness or untimely
deaths of biological parents, to the parents' inability to
care for the child’s basic needs necessary for survival.
Over the past 15 years there has been a dramatic rise in the
number of children who are internationally adopted and a
majority of these children have been raised in an
institutional care facility.
In countries from the Eastern European block such as Russia,
Romania, Ukraine and Moldova, children are still being
placed into orphanages at an alarming rate. Reasons for
abandonment stem from the fact that since the fall of the
Communism, democracy and freedom have left many people
poverty stricken and homeless. The lower socioeconomic class
no longer has the social support of the government to help
with their survival. Because of the poor economic situations
of these people, families are no longer able to care for the
medical, physical and psychological needs of their young.
Families that are condemned to a life of poverty find
orphanages to be the only viable alternative that their
children have for survival and maybe even a future. Strange
as this may sound it does occur all too frequently.
Hospital-based institutions are still state-run facilities
with little or no resources. Children who have any type of
medical condition (even minor problems) are placed in
institutions, which also house patients with the more severe
and sometimes neuropsychiatric conditions that no child
should ever be exposed to. Children with more complicated or
chronic medical conditions (such as blood disorders;
infectious disease, congenital malformations and classic
autism) are doomed to a forgotten life behind closed cold
walls of the institutions.
The biggest problem that I personally have with the
institutional setting is medical diagnoses that are given to
these children. These diagnoses often are false, exaggerated
and unfortunately sometimes very real. The disparity to the
severity of the medical problems found in these children is
is sometimes incomprehensible. They mix the severely
mentally retarded, autistic, and handicapped patients with
the relatively normal child who is abandoned, with mild
developmental delay or the child who required minor surgery
that is unable to acquire the procedure in order to lead a
normal and healthy life..
Unfortunately, once a child was placed in a orphanage, that
label follows the child for years, especially in countries
like communist Romania during the 1980s. These children were
fated to remain there for a life without appropriate medical
care or even the possibility of having a family to care for
their needs..
Developmental delays are frequently found in many of the
orphanage children, even before they are placed in the
institution. This is usually a direct result of poor
pre-natal and post-natal factors, nutritional inadequacies
and medical neglect. Once placed in an institutional care
setting, these minor delays are often misconstrued as a
metal deficiency or mental retardation.
During the critical years of neurobiological development of
the child's brain, orphanages are notorious for being
deficient in providing the social, emotional and cognitive
stimulation required for normal development of the child.
Many children are starved, neglected, and forced to stay in
their cribs in order to follow safety protocols.
Children are frequently and repetitively moved from one age
group to another. As the child ages out, he can no longer
learn anything new for the younger children in the group and
often regresses to a more immature behavior.
All of these factors, combined with profound medical,
nutritional, and physical neglect cause these children to
revert back to a more primitive state in the child’s mental
development. Speech, language, and intellectual abilities
languish, and over time developmental milestones deteriorate
to levels where the child may appear to be truly mentally
delayed or retarded.
As a defense mechanism, in order to maintain the child’s own
inner well being, neglected children generally shut out all
environmental and interpersonal contact that could cause
them harm. There is sometimes a component of learned
helplessness. It is this type of behavior that often gets
labeled as Institutional Autism. Once this pattern of
regression occurs, it tends to be insidious and progressive.
The following is a list of characteristics that children
with Instititutional Autism exhibit:
Loss of physical height and weight. These children look much
younger than their chronological age.
Severe language delay which can regress to infant babbling
Lack of eye contact, aloofness
Failure to orient to child’s name
Lack of interactive play
Lack of interest in peers
Failure to use gestures to point or show
Sometimes there are severe issues with bedwetting and
soiling
Behavioral control issues and lack of social development
Attention and concentration problems. Example: ADHD-like
behavior
Deficient in learning and memory
Institution-acquired autistic behaviors
Some of the most worrisome and disturbing characteristics of
children afflicted with Institutional Autism are that when
they have complete regression, they resort to
self-stimulating behaviors in order to fill the lapses
regarding loneliness, deprivation and despair.
Examples of these behaviors are:
Rocking and head banging
Uncontrollable outbursts of rage and aggression
Body thrusting into inanimate objects such as walls
Self-mutilating behaviors such as hair pulling and picking
at the body
During the adoption process many parents are faced with the
dilemma of acquiring a child who exhibits some or all of the
above mentioned characteristics. Parents become saddened
when the child does not come running or show any type of
emotion towards them when they arrive to meet the child.
During the first hours to days for these children to be
withdrawn, exhibit lack eye contact and lack of
communication with the families. Observation over time is
the best means to differentiate adjustment problems versus
more severe conditions.
After the adoption process is complete and the child returns
to the United States, some of these children continue to
display some quasi-autistic behaviors learned from in the
institution for a period of time after the adoption is
completed.
It must be remembered that all orphan children have
significant impairment in both communication and their
social skills. These children cannot be expected to come
home, put on a pair of blue jeans and function immediately
in our society. There is a great deal of work that is
required to rehabilitate these children. In contrast to true
Autism, Institutional Autism tends to improve with time and
proper interventional services. It has also been found that
some children who arrive with severe mental impairment upon
arrival have a dramatic improvement in their IQ points in
the first years post-adoption.
I must once again stress the importance of rehabilitation,
education and a great deal of work on behalf of the parents
in order to obtain these results.
by George Rogu M.D.
Disclaimer
The information and advice provided is intended to be
general information, NOT as advice on how to deal with a
particular child's situation and or problem. If your child
has a specific problem you need to ask your pediatrician
about it - only after a careful history and physical exam
can a medical diagnosis and/or treatment plan be made. This
Web site does not constitute a physician-patient
relationship.
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