Jane Knitzer Ed'D - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

Jane Knitzer Ed'D

Description:

Healthy brain development sets the stage for successful early learning and ... Kentucky KIDS NOW cross system initiative includes mental health consultants ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:47
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: tell98
Category:
Tags: jane | knitzer

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Jane Knitzer Ed'D


1
Investing Smart in Infant and Early Childhood
Mental Health
  • Jane Knitzer Ed.D
  • National Center for Children in Poverty
  • Michigan Great Start November 14, 2007

2
National Center for Children in Poverty
  • Our Mission
  • To promote the security, health, and well-being
    of Americas low-income children and families.
  • Our Foci
  • Improved family economic security
  • Healthy, nurturing families
  • Young children succeeding in school
  • Our Approach
  • Use research to promote improved policies and
    fiscal practices

3
Outline for Todays Talk
  • What is Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health
  • Why Invest
  • What to Invest In
  • Building a System Challenges and Opportunities
  • Moving Forward Toward A Great Start Agenda

4
Defining Healthy Social and Emotional
Development
  • Age-appropriate social, emotional and behavioral
    capacity (particularly related to school
    readiness) includes the ability to
  • Manage emotions (e.g. anger, frustration)
  • Relate to adults (parents, teachers, foster
    parents) and peers
  • Feel good about themselves (curious, safe in
    exploring the world, approach learning eagerly
    etc.)

5
Setting the Context The Big Picture
  • The Challenge Ensuring that young low-income
    children have the physical, cognitive and social
    and emotional skills to succeed in the early
    school years
  • What Can Help? The Big Picture
  • Family Economic Security
  • High quality early care and learning programs
  • Family support
  • Intentional strategies to promote social and
    emotional health and reduce behavioral risks

6
  • Why invest?

7
The Message from Developmental Research Brain
Science is Clear
  • Early relationships set the stage for healthy
    brain development.
  • Healthy brain development sets the stage for
    successful early learning and necessary social
    and emotional skills
  • Successful early learning (aka school readiness
    and transition) sets the stage for of later
    success in school.
  • Early cognitive learning is intertwined with
    social and emotional learning and functioning and
    can help reduce the achievement gap

8
Major Risk Factors for Poor Social and Emotional
Development are Known
  • The more demographic and psychosocial risk
    factors the less likely positive social and
    emotional outcomes.
  • Special risks include Extreme poverty (incomes
    under 10,000 a year for a family of four)
    concentrated community poverty multiple
    demographic risks
  • Psychosocial parental adversities that are
    barriers to effective parenting including
  • Depression 40 prevalence rates (EHS) substance
    abuse 10 domestic violence, prior, concurrent
    trauma
  • Poor quality child care and early learning

9
Social and Emotional Problems in Young Children
are Widespread
  • No national epidemiological data, but
  • 10 of all kindergarten children show problematic
    behavior (ECLS)
  • Rates are two or three times as high in
    low-income samples
  • Clinical level problems are lower but still
    significant (17 across diagnostic categories)
  • Young children are being kicked out of child care
    settings particularly children of color.

10
Therefore Social and Emotional Problems Among
Young Children
  • Are real.
  • The Institute of Medicine reported that Young
    children are capable of deep and lasting sadness,
    grief, and disorganization in response to trauma,
    loss, and early personal rejection.
  • Matter now and in the future.
  • Social and emotional problems can seriously
    compromise early child development and have
    lasting negative impact.
  • Are associated with poverty.
  • More exposures to poor parenting skills,
    inadequate child care, toxic substances, deprived
    play environments, etc.
  • Have cumulative impact.
  • Research suggests that negative experiences, and
    chronic stressors may affect a young child's
    developing brain (NICHD and NIMH)
  • The combination of biological and psychosocial
    risks have a compound effect. (IOM)
  • Can be addressed and ameliorated, but not with
    traditional mental health paradigms ( pull out
    therapy focused on the child)

11
Goals and Assumptions of Infant and Early
Childhood Mental Health
  • Goals
  • Promote early school success
  • Build capacity in early childhood work
  • Promote effective parenting, particularly in
    high-risk families
  • Deliver family-focused (parent-child) mental
    health services
  • Core Assumptions Challenges traditional paradigm
  • The best way to help young children is to help
    parents and other adults who are closest to them.
  • Use a public health approach, not a traditional
    mental health paradigm
  • Go across systems where families are
  • Acknowledge that young children can have serious
    problems

12
A Public Health Mental Health Framework for
Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health
  • Promotion

All kids
Prevention
Intervention
Increasing intensity of need Decreasing numbers
of children
13
What Can Help Promotion
  • Basic high quality child development programs
    (EHS, serving about 3000 infants and toddlers in
    Michigan)
  • Anticipatory guidance and support for parenting
    through the health care systems (mh consultants,
    Healthy Steps)
  • Community-based promotion strategies like Touch
    Points
  • Research-informed parenting programs through WIC,
    TANF
  • WHAT FITS IN MICHIGAN? IS IT STATEWIDE?

14
What Can Help Prevention
  • Targeted to young children and families already
    showing risk (BUT not necessarily through direct
    services). Types include
  • Social and emotional curricula for children (
    Tools of the Mind) and parents (Incredible Years)
  • Interventions embedded in early childhood
    programs Family Connections (Beardslee)
  • Facilitated social support for families (Baby
    FAST)
  • Early childhood mental health consultation (3
    stories)
  • Child Care Expulsion Project (Also CT, Colorado,
    Maryland)
  • Uses ecological analysis of the childs
    environment and support systems
  • WHAT FITS IN MICHIGAN? IS IT STATEWIDE?

15
Early Childhood Mental Health Consultation cont
  • Findings from evaluations of mental health
    consultation and case management strategies for
    0-5 preschool programs show
  • Language improvement
  • Reductions in developmental delays
  • Decreases in aggression (or less increase than in
    controls)
  • Decreases in expulsion
  • (From Gilliam, Starting Early Starting Smart
    Perry)
  • Michigans program reports similar impacts needs
    to be statewide, still in only 31/83 counties

16
Workforce Challenges Opportunities
  • Challenges
  • Identify, recruit train early childhood mental
    health consultants and therapists
  • Address cultural diversity, language challenges
  • Embed more appropriate training for early
    childhood teachers
  • Opportunities
  • Build statewide training networks, using common
    curricula, peer supports, blended funding (IN,
    KY, MN, UT)
  • Specialized Institutes (MA, SF re trauma)
  • Embed requirements in credentials and
    professional development for ECE teachers
  • Threats to success
  • Poorly trained ECMH consultants
  • Generic interventions that wont make a
    difference

17
Examples of MH Consultation Strategies
  • Illinois - Reimbursement for maternal depression,
    funds for ECMH child care consultation for all
    early childhood settings, and screening in
    primary care initiative.
  • Ohio - started with a pilot mh consultation
    program did statewide training, appropriated
    funds for grants to counties, now serving 6500
    children. Even more in Cleveland.
  • Kentucky KIDS NOW cross system initiative
    includes mental health consultants as resources
    to child care health consultants. Also have home
    visiting and medical home initiative.
  • Connecticut - multi-disciplinary health
    consultation model, screening and follow-up
    emphasis, parents connect through Help Me Grow
    warm-line.

18
Helping Higher Risk Young Children and Families
  • Mental Health Consultation to DV Shelters,
  • Evidence-based parent-child therapy (e.g. PCIT)
  • Wrap around services
  • Infant toddler mental health strategies
  • Treatment for maternal depression linked to
    strengthening parent-child relationships and if
    necessary, early intervention (Every Child
    Counts)
  • Child Welfare Incredible Years PCIT, Home Start
  • ALL TRAUMA INFORMED STRATEGIES (Cooper, NCCP)
  • EARLY CHILHDOOD SYSTEMS OF CARE

19
The Role of Screening
  • Too many children have undetected conditions.
  • Screening is essential for early identification
    of risks and conditions.
  • The screening process helps families and
    providers talk about concerns.
  • Screening is the gateway to eligibility for many
    intervention services.
  • Increasing attention to screening moms for
    conditions/risks that impair parenting, esp.
    depression

20
Screening in Action Across Systems
  • FOR CHILDREN
  • Pediatricians
  • ASQ/SE Early Childhood Programs
  • Part C ( In Michigan, pilot with Part C, DECA IT)
  • Child Welfare ?in Michigan ( 6400 young children
    in care)
  • FOR MOMS
  • Pediatricians (using standardized screens) and
    other health providers ( Chicago)
  • CHALLENGES
  • Payment (ABCD finds codes are not the problem for
    children)
  • After screening, what (Help Me Grow)

21
Principles for Developing Supports and
Infrastructure
  • Grounded in developmental knowledge
  • Relationship-based and family-centered
  • Infused into and delivered in early childhood
    services (NOT office based)
  • Attentive to community norms, cultures
  • Use multiple entry points, (TANF, WIC)
  • Family-focused for higher risk families
  • Evaluated with measures that are both
    developmentally policy relevant

22
Challenges Opportunities
  • What to call it (destigmatizing mental health)
  • How to measure and monitor impact
  • Ensuring a trained work force
  • Implementing research-informed practices ( Weisz)
  • Paying for children w/o diagnoses (build on
    existing legislation for at risk infants in
    Michigan other model F4L)
  • Avoiding unintended consequences
  • Rush to the clinical model
  • Not using a pre-birth to five framework
  • Ignoring young children not in center-based
    programs
  • Opportunities GREAT START Develop a three year
    plan to go statewide

23
Opportunity Great Start
  • Great Start Priority All early childhood
    practitioners and setting support healthy social
    and emotional development
  • Strategically strengthen cross training for all
    early childhood providers (map through
    collaboratives) include ccrrs
  • Continue to grow screening across settings
  • Expand promotion programs like Touch Points

24
Great Start Great Opportunity
  • Great Start Priority Build a Statewide System
  • Prevention Policy implications
  • Take CCEP STATEWIDE (cost 3 million)
  • Other Expand consultation to pediatricians,
    home-visitors and child welfare OVER TIME
  • Early Intervention
  • Ensure every cmhc has a specialist in b-5
  • Expand the at-risk fund for infants and toddlers
    to preschoolers
  • Develop a strategic partnership with child
    welfare to respond to the 6400 young children in
    placement (Fisher) and implement evidence-based
    parent-training for children not in placement
    (PCIT, Incredible Years)

25
For More Information, Contact Dr. Jane Knitzer
jk340_at_columbia.edu Or Visit NCCP web
site www.nccp.org SIGN UP FOR OUR UPDATES See
2006 Facts Sheets Trend Data Book Data
Wizards Early childhood publications
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com