AT News

Archived Issue

Originally emailed 16 June 2004


Contents of This Issue

  1. “Focus on Family” Drops AT Book
  2. “Bay Area Skeptics” Article on Attachment Therapy
  3. What’s the Latest Excuse for Abusing Kids with “Holding Therapy”?

“Focus on Family” Drops AT Book

Focus on the Family’s (FOF) website and radio shows reach millions of people every week. So it became a concern to Advocates for Children in Therapy (ACT) that FOF was selling a book by Attachment Therapists Gregory Keck, Ph.D., and Regina Kupecky, LSW, along with a glowing recommendation.

FOF was generous enough to review our concerns. The book, Parenting the Hurt Child, was removed from their online store. Spokesman for FOF, Shelly Smith, wrote ACT: “…we indeed do NOT endorse any particular form of treatment for Reactive Attachment Disorder, and it’s not our aim to make comments which might be construed as such.”

Letters of thanks can be sent to:

Ms. Shelly Smith
Focus on the Family
Office of the President
Colorado Springs, CO 80995

Keck and Kupecky run the Attachment and Bonding Center of Ohio, a registered member organization of ATTACh, the national organization for Attachment Therapists. Keck is also a past president of ATTACh. A chapter from their book Adopting the Hurt Child, entitled “Holding Therapy,” is on their website; it refers to abusive AT methods, with typical double-talk claiming “holding therapy” is not restraint:

Excerpts:


“Bay Area Skeptics” Article on Attachment Therapy

Pat Crossman, a social worker in Berkeley, California, has been following Attachment Therapy closely for several years. Her vast knowledge of the “reparenting” and TA movements have contributed much to the understanding of AT and its roots.

In “The Etiology of a Social Epidemic,” an article that appears in the current issue of BASIS, Crossman adds to the small but growing body of AT criticism. You can read this article on the Bay Area Skeptics’ website.



What’s the Latest Excuse for Abusing Kids with “Holding Therapy”?

Anorexia! Advice from the Bahá’ís:

There has been some success with Anorexic girls through Holding Therapy which appears to be re-parenting. There is an early and fundamental step in emotional growth mis-fired in many of those who suffer from Anorexia … [by] a woman who pioneered a very successful treatment program. Basically girls lived with her in groups and she appeared to re-parent them from babyhood … feeding them by hand, and so on. They were not allowed to “care” for themselves for a period of time. The success was long-term.

Caution: links may have aged since this AT News was first emailed.


ACT Home Disclaimer AT News