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Title: Effects of Nonparental Child Care on Child Development: An Update
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. Lamb, Michael E.
Effects of Nonparental Child Care on Child Development: An Update
Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 41,6 (August 1996): 330-342.
Also: http://www.mendeley.com/research/effects-nonparental-child-care-child-development-update/
Cohort(s): NLSY79
Publisher: Canadian Psychiatric Association
Keyword(s): Behavioral Problems; Child Care; Child Development; Children, Behavioral Development; Cognitive Ability; Cognitive Development; Infants; Maternal Employment

Permission to reprint the abstract has not been received from the publisher.

Objective: To review the published literature on the effects of nonparental and out-of-home care on infants, toddlers, and preschoolers.

Method: Narrative literature review.

Results: Although substantial controversy persists, the accumulated evidence suggests that nonparental care does not necessarily have either beneficial or detrimental effects on infants and children, although it can have such effects. In some circumstances, care providers establish relationships with children that have significant effects on development, and this increases the importance of ensuring that care providers are well trained, behave sensitively, and are stable rather than ephemeral figures in children's lives. Nonparental care is associated with behaviour problems (including aggression and noncompliance) when the care is of poor quality and opportunities for meaningful relationships with stable care providers are not available, however.

Conclusion: The effects of out-of-home care vary depending on the quality of care as well as the characteristics of individual children, including their age, temperaments, and individual backgrounds.

Bibliography Citation
Lamb, Michael E. "Effects of Nonparental Child Care on Child Development: An Update." Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 41,6 (August 1996): 330-342.