Marshall Schechter, a psychiatrist
in private practice in Beverly Hills, California, reported in 1960
that adoptees were 100 times more likely than non-adoptees to present
a range of serious emotional problems. Like a number of other contributions
to the psychopathology literature, Schechter’s report was
based on a tiny number of cases. He presented information about
120 children seen in his practice between 1948 and 1953, of whom
exactly sixteen (or 13.3 percent) were adopted. Since adoptees numbered
less than one-tenth of one percent in the general population, adopted
children were greatly over-represented in his practice. Schechter’s
friend, Povl Toussieng, a child psychiatrist at the famous Menninger
Clinic, had also told him that up to one-third of all children seen
as outpatients at the clinic were adopted. Schechter’s own
observations, confirmed by a trusted colleague, were the basis for
his conclusion. Adoption had an emotionally damaging impact on child
development.
What exactly was it about adoption that caused problems? According
to Schechter, the answer could be found in the psychoanalytic theory
that “object relations” (the first and closest ties
formed between infants and the adults who care for them) were crucial
determinants of personhood. Children could not cope with the knowledge
that they had been rejected by birth
parents and no amount of reassurance that their adoptive parents
loved and wanted them could make up for the “severe narcissistic
injury” that adoption inflicted. Each and every one of his
sixteen cases illustrated “how the idea of adoption had woven
itself into the framework of the child’s personality configuration.”
Telling children they were adopted
was mandatory, Schechter agreed, but it also precipitated psychological
difficulties. Carefully timing and managing the details of telling
could help mitigate the resulting problems. (Later studies challenged
this view. See, for example, the excerpt from Benson
Jaffee and David Fanshel, How They Fared in Adoption.)
Schechter was not the first person to suggest that adoption posed
intrinsic psychological risks. As early as 1937, psychiatrist David
Levy presented case histories showing that adoptees suffered from
“primary affect hunger,” a term he used to describe
what is now called attachment disorder. A number of other clinicians
in the U.S. and Britain published reports in the 1940s and 1950s
about the deleterious consequences of growing up “without
genealogy.” It was the boldness of Schechter’s claim
that adopted children were much more likely to become neurotic and
psychotic that galvanized helping professionals and therapeutic
approaches to adoption. It also generated a great deal of controversy.
H. David Kirk, author of Shared
Fate, called Schechter’s study “spurious.”
Many other researchers were equally skeptical that adoption was
the sort of risk factor Schechter maintained it was.
Schechter’s methodology drew the most fire. Small numbers
of detailed case histories had long been standard features of medical
research and psychiatrists renowned for their contributions to developmental
theory, including Sigmund Freud
and Anna Freud, relied on
them extensively. But psychologists and social workers with training
in scientific research methods insisted that Schechter’s sample
was far too small to be representative and disparaged his crude
and inaccurate statistical calculations. His research design was
so flawed as to be hopelessly unreliable.
Schechter responded by sending a questionnaire to members of the
Southern California Psychiatric Society and various regional institutions.
A follow-up report presented empirical data showing that adoptees
showed up in clinical populations everywhere at much higher than
average rates.
Schechter’s account of the damage that adoption did to children
was vigorously contested during the 1960s. Today, it is widely accepted
by parents and professionals who agree that attachment and loss
are at the heart of what makes adoption a distinctive and difficult
experience. This consensus was efficiently summarized in a book
that Schechter co-edited with developmental psychologist David Brodzinsky:
The Psychology of Adoption (1990).
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