Attachment Difficulties
Attachment Difficulties: AbilityScore 600–700 — next steps
An AbilityScore of 600–700 is a starting point, not a verdict. It tells your clinician where to begin building safety and connection. The next step is a relationship-based plan with you as the central partner — confirmed only at a Pinnacle centre.
An AbilityScore in the 600–700 band is a clear starting point — not a verdict — and it tells you exactly where to begin building safety and connection.
In short
This band gives your clinician a structured picture of where your child is today with attachment, regulation and relationship-building — measured against your child's own baseline, not against other children. The next step is simple: turn that measurement into a plan. A 600–700 band typically points to targeted relationship-based support delivered with you, the parent, as the central partner — because attachment grows through consistent, warm, responsive caregiving, not through your child working alone.What this band means in practice
[Attachment Difficulties](/) (ICD-11 6B44) describe a child whose early experiences have made trust, comfort-seeking and emotional regulation harder than expected. A 600–700 AbilityScore band suggests there is real, workable ground to build on. In day-to-day terms, support at this stage usually focuses on:- Predictability — steady routines, the same calm responses, so the world becomes safe enough to relax into.
- Attunement — noticing your child's cues and responding warmly and quickly, again and again.
- Co-regulation — staying calm and present with your child during distress, so they borrow your calm until they can find their own.
- Repair — gently reconnecting after every rupture, which is how secure trust is quietly rebuilt.
Progress here is measured in small, real wins: a moment of seeking you for comfort, a tantrum that ends a little sooner, eye contact that lingers.
When to seek more
If you notice your child showing no comfort-seeking at all, extreme withdrawal, or distress that does not settle even with consistent warmth, share this with your clinician promptly so the plan can be adjusted. Attachment work is steady, not instant — plateaus are normal and not failure.The Pinnacle way
Your clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under the care of a qualified clinician — never from an online figure alone. Your clinician will translate this band into a relationship-focused plan, often combining behavioural and family-centred therapy with parent coaching, and will re-measure against your child's own baseline so even quiet progress becomes visible. Across 70+ centres and 4.95 lakh+ families, the goal is always the same: a child who feels safe, seen and connected.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 (6B44, attachment-related disorders); WHO/UNICEF Nurturing Care Framework; American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on early relational health.Next step — Bring this band to a clinician who can turn it into a plan. Book an assessment with a Pinnacle Blooms Network team.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Share with your clinician promptly if your child shows no comfort-seeking at all, extreme or prolonged withdrawal, or distress that does not settle even with consistent, warm, predictable responses.
Try this at home
Build one tiny ritual of connection each day — a cuddle at the same moment, a shared song, a predictable goodbye phrase. Repeat it warmly and identically; this steady predictability is how a child learns the world is safe.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Does a 600–700 AbilityScore mean my child has a serious problem?
No. The band is a structured snapshot of where your child is today with attachment and regulation, measured against their own baseline — not a label and not a verdict. It simply tells your clinician where to begin a supportive plan.
Will I be part of the therapy?
Yes — you are central. Attachment grows through consistent, warm, responsive caregiving, so support at this band almost always includes parent coaching and relationship-based work done with you, not just with your child alone.
How soon will we see change?
Progress is steady rather than instant, and it shows in small real-life wins — a moment of comfort-seeking, a quicker recovery from distress, longer eye contact. Your clinician re-measures against your child's own baseline so even quiet progress becomes visible.
Can a diagnosis be made from this score?
No. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under a qualified clinician's care — never from an online figure.