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Unequal From the Start

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fostering collaboration among those who work with babies, toddlers and their families ... Many families with infants and toddlers never access the services already ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Unequal From the Start


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Unequal From the Start
  • Unequal in 3 domains of healthy children, strong
    families and early learning from birth
  • Experience and Evidence has proven the best time
    to intervene to optimize the development of our
    children and eliminate these disparities in a
    cost effective manner is in the first three years
    of life
  • By investing in young children and their
    families, New York City can benefit by improving
    health outcomes, social and economic well being
    and educational success throughout the life span

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  • Healthy Children
  • Strong Families
  • Early Learning

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Data Issues
  • Need more concentration on 0-3 age group (hidden
    within the under 5 data)
  • Need more information at the neighborhood and
    borough level to tease out the disparities
  • Need more meaningful data points for important,
    but difficult to assess areas of infancy (i.e.
    adequate developmental screening and referral)

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Healthy Children
  • Large disparities in birth outcomes
  • Insufficient and disparate immunization
    information
  • Lack of medical homes
  • Unmet nutritional needs
  • Incomplete knowledge about developmental
    screening and referral and receipt of services
  • Disparities in Early Intervention (EI) based on
    neighborhood and income exist and are being
    addressed by the city
  • Dearth of mental health services for children
    under age 3

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Strong Families
  • Over half of NYC infants and toddlers live in
    low- income or poor families
  • Most parents of young children work outside the
    home and struggle to balance work/family demands
  • Many families with infants and toddlers never
    access the services already available to them
    (i.e. WIC, SCHIP, Medicaid, food stamps, housing
    supports)
  • One-third of NY State parents with children under
    5 had to change jobs or change child care
    arrangements in the past year
  • Maternal pregnancy related depression is
    under-diagnosed by as much as 50 in NYC
  • Home visiting exists in NYC for approximately
    4,000 high risk individuals to help support new
    families but is unavailable to the vast majority

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Early Learning
  • Most infants and toddlers are cared for in
    informal child care arrangements
  • Only 7 of children under age 3 are in regulated
    child care
  • NYC lacks sufficient regulated child care spots
    to meet need
  • Support and education for parents and the large
    network of informal caregivers is lacking
  • Regulated child care is expensive
  • Child care standards at the city level do not
    meet state and best practice standards

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General Conclusions
  • Data for 0-3 age group is insufficient across the
    board infants and toddlers are overlooked
  • Great disparities based on income and
    neighborhood exist from the beginning of life in
    health outcomes and access to resources
  • While there are examples of a wide variety of
    excellent programs in NYC that exist to help
    infants, toddlers and their families, gaps remain
    in access, utilization, capacity, coordination
    and quality of programs

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Healthy Children Recommendations
  • Track the health of infants and toddlers in real
    time for immunizations and developmental
    screening.
  • Address the disparities in birth outcomes
  • Ensure access to medical care including a medical
    home
  • Make mental health services available to babies
    and their families and increase the supply of
    qualified providers who can treat infants and
    toddlers in the context of relationships

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Strong Families Recommendations
  • Continue the innovative anti-poverty programs
    that raise income, educate parents, and provide
    training for better employment outlined in the
    Mayors initiative to increase opportunity and
    reduce poverty in NYC.
  • Screen all mothers in the primary care settings
    of pregnancy care (obstetrics) and well-baby care
    (pediatrics) for maternal depression. Develop a
    system of care to treat identified individuals

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Early Learning Recommendations
  • Reach out to the large informal child care
    network to aid them in their care of infants and
    children
  • Continue to expand availability of proven infant
    and toddler programs
  • Meet the same child care standards as New York
    State and best practice recommendations
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