Mirek Lojkasek
University of Toronto
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mirek Lojkasek.
Tradition | 1999
Nancy J. Cohen; Elisabeth Muir; Mirek Lojkasek; Roy Muir; Carol Jane Parker; Melanie Barwick; Myrna Brown
This research compared two forms of psychodynamic psychotherapeutic interventions for 67 clinically referred infants and their mothers. One was an infant-led psychotherapy delivered through a program called Watch, Wait, and Wonder (WWW). The other was a mother- infant psychotherapy (PPT). Infants ranged in age from 10 to 30 months at the outset of treatment, which took place in weekly sessions over approximately 5 months. A broad range of measures of attachment, qualities of the mother- infant relationship, maternal perception of parenting stress, parenting competence and satisfaction, depression, and infant cognition and emotion regulation were used. The WWW group showed a greater shift toward a more organized or secure attachment relationship and a greater improvement in cognitive development and emotion regulation than infants in the PPT group. Moreover, mothers in the WWW group reported
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2008
Nancy J. Cohen; Mirek Lojkasek; Zohreh Yaghoub Zadeh; Mirella Pugliese; Heidi Kiefer
BACKGROUND China has become a lead country for international adoption because of the relatively young age of the children and reported positive conditions of the orphanages. This study examined the process and outcome of growth and development of children adopted from China over their first two years with their adoptive families. METHOD Seventy infant girls adopted from China at 8 to 21 months of age (Mean age = 13 months) were examined on arrival in Canada and 6, 12, and 24 months later. Comparisons were made with non-adopted Canadian girls of similar age and from a similar family background as adoptive parents on indices of growth and standardized measures of mental, psychomotor, and language development. RESULTS At arrival, children adopted from China were smaller physically and exhibited developmental delays compared to current peers. Children adopted from China were functioning in the average range on physical and developmental measures within the first 6 months following adoption. However, they were not performing as well as current peers until the end of their second year after adoption. Even then, there was developmental variation in relation to comparison children and continuation of relatively smaller size with respect to height, weight, and head circumference. Physical measurement was related to outcomes at various points on all developmental measures. CONCLUSIONS Deprivation in experience in the first year of life has more long-lasting effects on physical growth than on mental development. The variable most consistently related to development was height-to-age ratio. As a measure of nutritional status, the findings reinforce the critical importance of early nutrition.
Tradition | 2002
Nancy J. Cohen; Mirek Lojkasek; Elisabeth Muir; Roy Muir; Carol Jane Parker
Psychotherapy | 1994
Mirek Lojkasek; Nancy J. Cohen; Elisabeth Muir
Tradition | 2004
Melanie Barwick; Nancy J. Cohen; Naomi B. Horodezky; Mirek Lojkasek
Children and Youth Services Review | 2010
Mirella Pugliese; Nancy J. Cohen; Fataneh Farnia; Mirek Lojkasek
Infant Observation | 1999
Elisabeth Muir; Mirek Lojkasek; Nancy J. Cohen
Kinderanalyse | 2003
Nancy J. Cohen; Elisabeth Muir; Mirek Lojkasek
Archive | 2002
Nancy J. Cohen; Mirek Lojkasek; Elisabeth Muir
Infant Behavior & Development | 1998
Nancy J. Cohen; Mirek Lojkasek; Elisabeth Muir