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Michigan’s Early Childhood Mental Health Services

Michigan’s Early Childhood Mental Health Services. Sheri Falvay, Michigan Department of Community Health, Mental Health Services to Children and Families. Michigan’s Efforts to Support Early Childhood Mental Health. Intervention Prevention Promotion. Promotion.

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Michigan’s Early Childhood Mental Health Services

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  1. Michigan’s Early Childhood Mental Health Services Sheri Falvay, Michigan Department of Community Health, Mental Health Services to Children and Families

  2. Michigan’s Efforts to Support Early Childhood Mental Health Intervention Prevention Promotion

  3. Promotion • High quality training on social-emotional development • For Child Care Providers and Parents: • MI4C/Child Care Resource and Referral • Michigan State University and • Child Care Expulsion Prevention • All funded with Child Care Development Block Grant Dollars earmarked for 0-3 Quality.

  4. Promotion • Collaboration agreement between MI4C, MSU-E and CCEP was developed. • Agreed to use common Social and emotional definition across trainings: Within the context of one’s family, community and cultural background it is the child’s developing capacity to: Experience and regulate emotions, Form securerelationships and Explore and learn (adapted from 0-3) • Agreed to create an expanded state level social and emotional training committee and to involve all early childhood partners, i.e. Part C, Head Start

  5. Promotion • Will work on (7) training recommendations : • Use the same definition and source for the topic of temperament. • Provide referral information for all three projects at trainings. • Emphasize the importance of the caregiver’s emotional health. • Emphasize the importance of nurturing, responsive caregiving and the importance of having a primary caregiver. • Use a common source for social-emotional milestones. • Emphasize the importance of true partnerships between parents and caregivers in promoting social-emotional health.

  6. Promotion 2. High quality training on social-emotional development • For Front line staff: (IMH, Mental Health consultants, Health workers, etc) • Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health Endorsement

  7. Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health Endorsement

  8. What is the Value of Endorsement? • Provides a level of assurance to families, agencies and the public at large that the person delivering services meets professional standards. • Provides a pathway for development in the infant and family field for the span of one’s career. • Provides a set of competencies to guide training, service and research.

  9. Development of a Professional System 1997, MI-AIMH designed a 4-level framework for an interdisciplinary professional development system to recognize competency: • Infant Family Associate – Level One • Infant Family Specialist – Level Two • Infant Mental Health Specialist – Level Three • Infant Mental Health Mentor – Level Four

  10. Framework for Endorsement: Component Parts MI-AIMH identified the following endorsement criteria to assure best practice outcomes for infants, toddlers & families: • specific educational experiences • work experiences with infant, toddlers & families • competency-based, in-service training experiences • reflective supervision/consultation experiences

  11. Additional Criteria for Endorsement • Infant Mental Health Code of Ethics • Reference ratings from 3 professionals • Successful completion of a 3-hour written exam for level 3 & 4 candidates • Membership in an IMH professional organization

  12. Steps to Endorsement • Inquiry • Applications • Portfolio preparation • Documentation • Endorsement

  13. How is MI Infusing Endorsement? • DCH requiring Level II endorsement by 2009 for all home based staff working in early childhood • DCH, early childhood mental health consultation program (CCEP) requires all staff to be endorsed at Level II.

  14. Michigan’s Efforts to Support Early Childhood Mental Health Intervention Prevention Promotion

  15. Prevention • Early Childhood Mental Health Consultation • Child Care Expulsion Prevention • Started in 1999, the Department of Human Services (DHS) made an interdepartmental agreement with the Michigan Department of Community Health, to establish one Child Care Expulsion Prevention (CCEP) project to support the mental health needs of young children in early care and education settings. • Now- 16 project in 31 counties

  16. “To support families and child care providers in successfully nurturing the social and emotional development of infants, toddlers and young children (0-5) who are in child care.” CCEP’s Goal

  17. The Cornerstones Programmatic and child-family centered consultation Skilled consultants Reflective supervision Technical assistance Evidence-based practice Collaboration

  18. Programmatic Consultation:What Do We Do? • Intake • Observation • Standardized Social and Emotional Assessment of Programs • Planning • Coaching • Build Relationships!

  19. New (3-hour) standardized modules: Social and Emotional Development Challenging Behavior Conflict Resolution Caring for the Caregiver CCEP Core Trainings

  20. CCEP Child/Family Consultation

  21. Child-Family Centered Consultation • Referral and Intake • Observation and Assessment • Meetings to Develop Positive Child Guidance Plans and Programmatic Plans to support child • Support for the Family and Provider to Implement Plans • Social-Emotional Trainings • Referrals to Outside Services as Needed • Follow-up Services (optional)

  22. Why are Children Referred? • Children are referred for many reasons but most often for; • Aggression (25%) • For example, biting, hitting, swearing, destroying property • Regulatory issues (27%) • For example, Child has difficulty adjusting to changes in routine, does not sleep or rest as needed, has toileting problems or feeding difficulties. • Developmental concerns (23%) • For example, child is clingy, has problems focusing, does not listen to care provider or parent, impulsive, or has problems with play (initiating, maintaining)

  23. What Happens with Support?(2007 data) • 83% of children referred to CCEP stayed in the program. 92% percent of these children had positive outcomes (17% moved or data was not completed for extenuating circumstances) • 56% stayed in the same child care setting with positive results • 23% transferred to a more appropriate child care setting with agreement from all involved • 13% of children “graduated” on to Kindergarten successfully or with appropriate support services • 4% of the children were expelled with no follow up • Another 4% were expelled but received services at a new site from CCEP

  24. Skilled Consultants & Reflective Supervision • Master’s Degree in Mental Health Related Field • Level II MI-AIMH Endorsement • Twice Monthly Reflective Supervision

  25. State-Level Technical Assistance for CCEP Projects and Others • Quarterly meetings in two regional locations • Monthly Training and Evaluation meetings for administrators of CCEP programs • On-site visits • Statewide and national training • Uniform forms and materials • Email group

  26. Evidence-Based Practice • Devereux Early Childhood Assessment for Infants, Toddlers and Preschoolers • Evaluation! • Data collection (child, care provider, family, and CCEP process) • Case Studies • Control Sample

  27. Michigan’s Efforts to Support Early Childhood Mental Health Intervention Prevention Promotion

  28. Intervention • Home-based Services for infants-toddlers, young children (0-3, 4-7) and their parents • Infant Mental Health Services • Parent Education • Other CMHSP Services (i.e. respite, case management services, etc.)

  29. What is Happening? • Revised 0-3 and 4-7 access criteria • Requirement of MIAIMH endorsement for staff working in early childhood services • State level committee charged with researching social and emotional assessments to support eligibility(18 tools researched) • DECA-I/T chosen for piloting • Still researching an adult/child interaction tool

  30. What is the DECA-IT? • The Devereux Early Childhood Assessment for Infants and Toddlers (DECA-IT) is a premier instrument for assessing protective factors and screening for potential risks for social and emotional development in very young children 4 weeks to 36 months.

  31. What Protective Factors Does the DECA-IT Measure?The Infant Assessment measures:Initiative andAttachment/RelationshipsThe Toddler Assessment measures:InitiativeAttachment/Relationships andSelf-Regulation

  32. What Ages Does it Cover? There are two assessments. • The Infant assessment covers from 4 weeks up to 18 months- It also has four scoring profiles: • 4 weeks to 3 months • 3 months up to 6 months • 6 months up to 9 months • 9 months up to 18 months • The Toddler assessment covers from 18 months to 36 months- It has one scoring profile

  33. Is it a Viable Assessment? • The DECA-IT meets or exceeds professional standards of quality in terms of: • Reliability • Validity • The DECA-It had a national standardization sample of 2,185 infants and toddlers from across the U.S.

  34. Efforts Towards Universal Use • Part C piloted the use of the DECA-I/T in combination with developmental assessment • Early Head Start has purchased kits for all sites with training to follow • All CCEP sites use the DECA for 0-3 and the Preschool DECA

  35. For More Information • Please Contact Sheri Falvay at: • Falvay@michigan.gov • 517/241-5762 • For information on CCEP or the DECA-I/T contact Mary Mackrain at: • Mackrain@aol.com • 248/594-3250

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