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Candace Newmaker
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Candace Newmaker
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Personal Background
Early Life and Adoption
Candace Tiara Elmore was born on November 19, 1989, in Lincolnton, Lincoln County, North Carolina, to Angela Maria Elmore, then aged 18, and Todd Evan Elmore.[5] Her biological family lived in poverty amid frequent moves between trailer parks and apartments, compounded by domestic violence from the father, who had a criminal record.[5] The couple had two more children following her birth: a daughter in February 1991 and a son in October 1992.[5] These circumstances of neglect and instability prompted intervention by social services, resulting in Candace being removed from her biological home around age 5 and declared a ward of the North Carolina Department of Children and Family Services.[6] She spent time in foster care before her adoption on June 14, 1996, at age 6, by Jeane Newmaker, a single nurse practitioner in her early 40s residing in Durham, North Carolina at the time.[5][6] Jeane, motivated to offer a stable and loving environment, renamed her Candace Elizabeth Newmaker and obtained a revised birth certificate designating Durham as the birthplace.[5] The adoptive family subsequently relocated to Lakewood, Colorado, where Jeane continued her career in nursing.[6]Behavioral Challenges and Diagnosis of Reactive Attachment Disorder
Candace Newmaker was placed into foster care in North Carolina at age five after repeated removals from her biological mother's custody due to neglect, instability, and trauma, including an incident where she was dropped from a second-story window.[7] She became a ward of Lincoln County, experiencing multiple caregiver transitions that disrupted attachment formation.[7] In 1996, at age six, she was adopted by Jeane Newmaker, a single nurse practitioner in her early forties residing in Durham, North Carolina.[7] [6] Post-adoption, Newmaker exhibited severe behavioral difficulties, including assaultive actions toward her adoptive mother, extreme defiance, angry outbursts, and attempts to control household dynamics.[7] These issues manifested privately as aggression and rebellion, contrasted by superficial charm displayed to outsiders, as documented by county caseworkers.[7] Additional challenges included an inability to form reciprocal affection, persistent lack of eye contact, manipulative tendencies, and apparent absence of conscience, which aligned with patterns observed in children with early institutionalization or neglect.[7] Jeane Newmaker reported escalating problems despite initial interventions, such as medication for attention deficit disorder starting six weeks post-adoption, including Dexedrine, Effexor, and Risperdal, which proved ineffective.[7] [8] The diagnosis of reactive attachment disorder (RAD) emerged from assessments linking her behaviors to disrupted early bonding. A social worker formally diagnosed RAD, attributing it to her history of caregiver separations and chaotic upbringing common in foster children.[6] Psychiatrist John Alston evaluated her as a "severe" case, citing a documented history of assaultive behavior and attachment deficits.[7] Psychologist Bill Goble corroborated this, classifying it as severe RAD based on a behavioral checklist that highlighted inhibited social engagement and emotional withdrawal.[7] Conventional talk therapy and pharmacotherapy failed to mitigate symptoms, prompting Jeane Newmaker to pursue alternative attachment-focused interventions.[6] RAD, as defined in diagnostic criteria, involves markedly disturbed and developmentally inappropriate social relatedness persisting beyond expected recovery from early deprivation, often featuring superficially sociable or inhibited behaviors.[1]Context of Attachment Therapy
Theoretical Foundations and Proponents' Claims
Attachment therapy's theoretical foundations derive from an extension of John Bowlby's attachment theory, positing that early disruptions in caregiver-child bonding—often due to institutionalization, neglect, or abuse—instill deep-seated rage and maladaptive defenses that prevent healthy emotional connections. Proponents argue this results in "attachment disorder," a condition they describe as distinct from and more severe than the DSM-defined reactive attachment disorder, manifesting in behaviors like superficial charm, manipulation, lack of empathy, and predatory aggression toward weaker individuals. Drawing on psychoanalytic notions of suppressed infantile rage, the approach incorporates rage-reduction methods developed by Robert Zaslow in the 1960s and 1970s, which emphasize provoking cathartic emotional release to dismantle the child's controlling facade and compel submission to parental authority.[9][10] Key proponents, including psychiatrist Foster Cline, contended that traditional therapeutic modalities fail because attachment-disordered children instinctively manipulate empathetic responses, reinforcing their dominance-oriented worldview rather than fostering dependence. Cline advocated "holding therapy," where adults physically restrain the child—often against their will—to enforce prolonged eye contact and verbal confrontation until the child "breaks" and expresses terror or rage, purportedly clearing barriers to attachment and enabling the parent to assume a corrective, authoritative role. This dominance-submission dynamic, proponents claimed, mirrors evolutionary caregiving hierarchies and reprograms the child's "wiring" for secure bonding, with Cline asserting in clinical descriptions that untreated cases could evolve into sociopathy.[10][11] Other advocates, such as Nancy Thomas, extended these ideas to parenting strategies, claiming in works like When Love Is Not Enough that reactive attachment disorder demands "power parenting"—withholding nurture until the child complies—to counteract their innate deceitfulness and superficial relations. Techniques like rebirthing, promoted by figures including Connell Watkins, were said to regress the child to a fetal state via swaddling and simulated birth canal compression, forcing a symbolic rebirth that resolves "cellular memories" of rejection and cements loyalty to the adoptive parent. Proponents maintained these interventions yield rapid, transformative results, with children exhibiting reduced aggression and genuine affection post-treatment, though they relied on anecdotal reports rather than empirical validation and dismissed mainstream psychology's relational models as inadequate for such entrenched pathologies.[12][13][14]Mainstream Psychological Criticisms and Evidence Assessment
Mainstream psychology distinguishes between John Bowlby's foundational attachment theory, which emphasizes secure early bonds for emotional development and is supported by extensive empirical research including longitudinal studies like the Minnesota Study of Risk and Adaptation, and the fringe variant known as "attachment therapy" (AT) or coercive attachment parenting, which incorporates unvalidated techniques such as physical restraint, rebirthing simulations, and rage provocation to purportedly "reattach" children with reactive attachment disorder (RAD).[15] These AT methods deviate from evidence-based practices by prioritizing confrontation over nurturing relationships, lacking randomized controlled trials demonstrating efficacy, and ignoring causal mechanisms of attachment formation rooted in responsive caregiving rather than forced compliance.[16] Critics, including the American Psychological Association (APA), highlight AT's pseudoscientific elements, such as unsubstantiated claims that adopted children universally suffer from pathological detachment requiring aggressive intervention, often leading to overdiagnosis of RAD—a condition recognized in the DSM-5 as rare and primarily linked to severe institutional neglect, not mere adoption histories.[17] The APA's 2002 position statement explicitly warns that unproven RAD treatments, including holding therapy and rebirthing, can inflict psychological harm or death, as evidenced by cases like Candace Newmaker's 2000 suffocation during a rebirthing session, underscoring risks from hypoxia, trauma, and iatrogenic injury absent any therapeutic benefit.[17] [1] Peer-reviewed analyses confirm AT's negligible observable benefits against high potential for damage, including exacerbated aggression and dissociation, with no causal evidence linking coercive restraint to secure attachment outcomes.[18] [10] Empirical assessment reveals AT's foundational assumptions contradict established data: secure attachments form through consistent, sensitive responsiveness, not adversarial "breaking down" of resistance, as randomized trials of evidence-based alternatives like Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) demonstrate improved parent-child bonds and symptom reduction in RAD cases without coercion.[19] Mayo Clinic guidelines endorse multi-pronged, non-punitive approaches—parent education, stable environments, and trauma-informed therapy—reporting better long-term emotional regulation than AT's anecdotal successes, which fail replication under controlled conditions.[20] Rebirthing and holding therapies specifically lack scientific consensus for safety or efficacy; post-Newmaker investigations prompted bans in Colorado by 2001, with NIH-linked reviews classifying them as dangerous alternatives promoting physical over psychological healing mechanisms.[1] [11]| Aspect | Mainstream Evidence-Based View | Attachment Therapy Claims and Critiques |
|---|---|---|
| RAD Prevalence and Diagnosis | Rare, tied to profound early neglect; DSM-5 requires observable inhibition. No routine adoption link.[21] | Overbroad application to any behavioral issue in adoptees; ignores comorbidity with ADHD/trauma. Lacks diagnostic rigor.[17] |
| Treatment Mechanisms | Builds trust via play, empathy training; PCIT shows 70-80% symptom remission in trials.[22] | Coercive "holding" to provoke catharsis; no RCTs, causal claims untestable and contradicted by attachment security data.[19] |
| Risks and Outcomes | Low harm; focuses on prevention of psychopathology via relational repair.[23] | Documented fatalities (e.g., Newmaker), psychological retraumatization; benefits self-reported but unverified.[1] [10] |
