# Synthesizing five decades of research on sensitive caregiving: A commentary on Nivison et al. ()

**Authors:** K. Lee Raby

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/jcpp.70146 · 2026-03-18

## TL;DR

This paper reviews 50 years of research showing that sensitive caregiving strongly supports children's development across multiple areas.

## Contribution

The paper emphasizes new insights into the broad developmental impact of sensitive caregiving, including cognitive and language domains.

## Key findings

- Caregiver sensitivity is strongly linked to cognitive and language development in children.
- Benefits of sensitive caregiving are consistent across various demographic factors.
- Socioeconomically disadvantaged contexts show amplified benefits from sensitive caregiving.

## Abstract

This commentary highlights the contributions of Nivison et al.'s (2026) umbrella meta‐analysis synthesizing five decades of research on sensitive caregiving and child development. Integrating findings from numerous meta‐analyses, the authors demonstrate that caregiver sensitivity is meaningfully associated with multiple domains of child development. Notably, associations with cognitive and language development are at least as large as those with attachment security and behavior problems, expanding traditional conceptualizations of sensitivity's developmental significance. The findings further indicate substantial consistency across child, parent, and family demographic characteristics, while suggesting amplified benefits in socioeconomically disadvantaged contexts. This commentary underscores key gaps in the literature, including the need for meta‐analytic investigations of children's peer competence, self‐regulation, and physical health outcomes, as well as the need for refined measurement of caregiving dimensions. Although causal inferences require randomized intervention evidence, the synthesis provides compelling support for sensitive caregiving as a central determinant of healthy development and offers a roadmap for future research and policy.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** anxiety (MESH:D001007), distress (MESH:D012128), behavior problems (MESH:D001523)

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13036386