dbo:abstract
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- Disinhibited Social Engagement Disorder (DSED), or Disinhibited Attachment Disorder, is an attachment disorder in which a child has little to no fear of unfamiliar adults and may actively approach them. It can significantly impair young children's abilities to relate with adults and peers, according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. as well as put them in dangerous and potentially unsafe conditions. Common examples of this include sitting on a person's lap of which they do not know or leaving with a stranger. DSED is exclusively a childhood disorder and is usually not diagnosed before the age of nine months or until after age five if symptoms do not appear. There is no current research showing that signs of DSED continue after twelve years of age. Infants and young children are at risk of developing DSED if they receive inconsistent or insufficient care from a primary caregiver. (en)
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dbo:synonym
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- Disinhibited Attachment Disorder
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- 14247 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
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- Disinhibited Attachment Disorder (en)
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- Disinhibited Social Engagement Disorder (DSED), or Disinhibited Attachment Disorder, is an attachment disorder in which a child has little to no fear of unfamiliar adults and may actively approach them. It can significantly impair young children's abilities to relate with adults and peers, according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. as well as put them in dangerous and potentially unsafe conditions. Common examples of this include sitting on a person's lap of which they do not know or leaving with a stranger. (en)
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- Disinhibited social engagement disorder (en)
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