Title: Jane Knitzer Ed'D
1Investing Smart in Infant and Early Childhood
Mental Health
- Jane Knitzer Ed.D
- National Center for Children in Poverty
- Michigan Great Start November 14, 2007
2National 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
3Outline 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
4Defining 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.)
5Setting 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 7The 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
8Major 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
9Social 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.
10Therefore 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)
11Goals 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
12A Public Health Mental Health Framework for
Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health
All kids
Prevention
Intervention
Increasing intensity of need Decreasing numbers
of children
13What 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?
14What 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?
15Early 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
16Workforce 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
17Examples 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.
18Helping 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
19The 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
20Screening 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)
-
21Principles 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
22Challenges 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
23Opportunity 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
24Great 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)
25For 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