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Reducing Child Welfare Involvement: The Promise and Limitations of Early Intervention Deborah Daro. Key concepts. Review key expectations regarding child well-being and well-becoming Discuss the evolution of prevention policy and practice in targeting these outcomes
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Reducing Child Welfare Involvement: The Promise and Limitations of Early InterventionDeborah Daro
Key concepts • Review key expectations regarding child well-being and well-becoming • Discuss the evolution of prevention policy and practice in targeting these outcomes • Examine the populations being served and service impacts of early intervention efforts • Highlight opportunities for enhancing impacts
Steps Toward Child “Well-Becoming” • Arriving at school ready to learn • Succeeding in school and achieving academic excellence • Being fully employed in line with one’s skills and competencies • Achieving economic stability and independence • Being socially well-adjusted and emotionally healthy
Earliest Well-Being Objectives • Being raised in familial and community environments that promote: • Safety • Stability • Nurturing • Appropriate stimulation and early learning opportunities • Avoid preventable injury and illness • Avoid being victims of child maltreatment and other forms of trauma
Prevention’s Impact on Racial Disparities • Are children of color over represented among the caseloads of early intervention programs? • Are children of color more likely to benefit from early intervention efforts? • Does an emphasis on target prevention programs improve the odds of long term positive outcomes for all children and reduce racial disparities?
Early Head Start Impacts • Positive Trends • Decrease in aggressive behaviors • More positive approaches to learning • Enhanced parent support for language and literacy development • Concerns • Early modest gains in language and cognitive development fade over time
Head Start Impacts • Positive Trends • Children are fully immunized • Most attend enriched pre-K programs and full-day Kindergarten • Successfully screened for vision, dental and behavioral health • Receiving stable medical care • Concerns • Modest gains in language and cognitive development that fade over time
Early Home Visitation Impacts Initiated During Pregnancy/Birth • Better birth outcomes (if offered during pregnancy) • Enhanced parent-child interactions • Positive maternal life and health choices • More efficient use of health care and community services • Enhanced child development and early detection of developmental delays Toddlers • Early literacy skills • Social competence • Parent involvement in learning
Factors Influencing Outcomes • Programs that are fully operational and implemented with fidelity • Provision of multiple early learning opportunities offered sequentially • Attention to the diverse range of difficulties facing high risk families • Strongest gains among the most disadvantaged and, in some cases, African American children
Prevention’s Circular Debate EFFICIENCY UNIVERSAL PREVENTION TARGETED PREVENTION STIGMATIZING
Limits of the “Targeted/Scientific” Approach • Requires highly predictive and accurate risk assessment protocols or eligibility criteria • Assumes we can successfully identify all those at risk • Assumes highest risk families will engage and remained involved in voluntary interventions • Promotes the message collective or social assistance with parenting is required only for those unable to do the job on their own • Assumes if we just had the “right” program models and took them to scale, population-level impacts will follow
Prevention as Change Agent • Technical solutions to strengthening community capacity • Creating new programs and supportive services for all parents • Building partnerships among key stakeholders • Mobilizing residents to better support service expansion • Adaptive challenges to transforming communities • Achieving consistent service quality and access • Creating institutional incentives for sustaining collaboration • Creating a context of personal responsibility for child well-being • Altering the political process to embrace prevention
Grow Prevention Systems “It is shocking that so many have chosen to focus on one year or two when the child was a preschooler and have disregarded the many subsequent years of development, exalted a single experience over myriad others, and are now putting their hopes and money on early childhood programs as the solution--not part of a solution -- to pervasive social problems.” Edward Zigler, 1993