1 / 32

Mental Health Consultation in Early Childcare Settings: Outcomes from an Arkansas Pilot Project

Mental Health Consultation in Early Childcare Settings: Outcomes from an Arkansas Pilot Project. Today’s Presentation. ECMH Consultation The need What is it? Overview of Arkansas pilot project Evaluation Results Lessons Learned Future Plans. Overview of the Need.

ruby
Download Presentation

Mental Health Consultation in Early Childcare Settings: Outcomes from an Arkansas Pilot Project

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mental Health Consultation in Early Childcare Settings:Outcomes from an Arkansas Pilot Project

  2. Today’s Presentation • ECMH Consultation • The need • What is it? • Overview of Arkansas pilot project • Evaluation Results • Lessons Learned • Future Plans

  3. Overview of the Need • Difficulties related to social-emotional development are common in young children. • 7% to 20% of children meet criteria for Oppositional Defiant Disorder or conduct disorder. • Up to 35% in low-income families (Webster-Stratton & Hammond, 1998). • 13% of preschool children described by parents as difficult to control (Campbell, 1995).

  4. Overview of the Need The Childcare Setting • For young children experiencing social-emotional problems, the childcare setting can make a difference • Teachers help set the stage for both learning and healthy social emotional development when…. • They have a warm relationship with the children And • Routines are consistent, rules are clear and children are taught expected behaviors in positive ways

  5. Overview of the NeedPreschool Expulsion • While teachers can help, children with serious behavior problems present challenges • In Southern States: • 10.4% of pre-k teachers reported expelling at least one preschooler in the past 12 months • 19.9% of those teachers reported expelling more than one. From: Prekindergarteners Left Behind: Expulsion Rates in State Prekindergarten Systems. The Foundation for Child Development. New York, NY. May 2005

  6. Overview of the NeedPreschool Expulsion • Rates were highest for older preschoolers and African-Americans. • Boys were over 4½ times more likely to be expelled than girls. • Rates were lowest in classrooms in public schools and highest in faith-based centers and for-profit child care. • Access to classroom-based mental health consultation made expulsion less likely.

  7. EARLY CHILDHOOD MENTAL HEALTH CONSULTATION – WHAT IS IT? • Intended to promote healthy social and emotional development for young children in group care and early education settings • Based on a collaborative relationship between mental health and childcare professionals continued

  8. EARLY CHILDHOOD MENTAL HEALTH CONSULTATION – WHAT IS IT? • There are two types of consultation: • Child Focused – To address needs of a specific child • Programmatic – To address issues within the childcare setting continued

  9. WHAT IS IT? Child Focused Consultation • Teacher identifies a child they are concerned about • Mental health consultant observes/assesses the child and engages the parent • A plan is created to address the issues that contribute to the child’s social and emotional difficulties • Parent, teacher and consultant bring expertise and a unique perspective to the process

  10. WHAT IS IT?Programmatic Consultation • Focuses on improving the overall quality of a childcare program by • Addressing structural issues that impact the climate of a classroom or • The teachers’ ability to build nurturing relationships with the children in their care

  11. ECMH consultation is NOT • Direct therapeutic services for children or their families • Completing formal mental health diagnostic evaluations • Serving as a classroom or teacher aide • Acting as the sole expert

  12. Arkansas Pilot Project Funded by: DHS/Division of Child Care and Early Childhood Education • Partners: • DHS/Division of Behavioral Health Services • Arkansas Head Start Collaboration Office • Grantees (selected through competitive process): • Ozark Guidance Center • Counseling Associates • Mid-South Health Systems • Evaluation - UAMS/Partners for Inclusive Communities

  13. Pilot Project Goals: • Enhance the capacity of childcare centers/ teachers and parents to prevent and manage social-emotional problems in children. • Improve the outcomes of children enrolled in the collaborating childcare programs.

  14. Teachers and Children Served • Each year more than 70 teachers have received consultation services. • Approx. 600 children screened per year • 9-12 centers involved each year • 1-2 centers dropped/added per year • Primarily Head Start or State-funded Pre-K • Included 3 developmental disability providers

  15. Arkansas Pilot ProjectEvaluation Study • Evaluation plan designed with input from all partners • Data collection activities include: • Assessment of Child Behavior and Strengths • Assessment of Teacher Behavior and Classroom Management • Teacher Survey • Focus Groups with Teachers/Parents • Includes a comparison group

  16. Outcomes- Teacher Satisfaction • Teachers are very satisfied with the consultation services. • 74% reported that they look to the mental health professional for help • 87% reported having a good relationship with the mental health professional • 76% reported having learned a new strategy from the mental health professional

  17. Outcomes- Teacher Behavior • Research staff conducted structured classroom observations using the Arnett Caregiver Interaction Scale. • Teachers receiving the consultation services are more likely to exhibit behaviors supportive of healthy social- emotional development than teachers in the comparison group.

  18. Outcomes- Teacher Behavior • By year 3, teachers receiving consultation were significantly: • More sensitive/positive • sensitive teachers have warm, high quality communication and are enthusiastic about children • Less permissive • permissive teachers avoid enforcing rule and disciplining children even when it seems necessary • Less detached • detached teachers avoid interacting with the children and do not appear interested in their activities

  19. Outcomes- Teacher Behavior Within the treatment group… • teachers who received more consultation services were more likely to change their classroom behaviors

  20. Outcomes- Child Behavior • Overall, 16% of children had seriously high levels of behavior problems. • As measured by teacher report on the Devereux Early Childhood Assessment (DECA) • Problems were more pervasive and severe in centers serving special needs children. • Almost half (46%) of children had seriously high levels of behavior problems.

  21. Outcomes- Child Behavior • By the third year of the project, children at intervention sites had fewer behavior problems than children in the comparison sites.

  22. Outcomes- Child Strengths • Protective factors help buffer against stress and help make children less vulnerable to social problems as they go through childhood. • By the third year of the project, children at intervention sites had more protective factors than children in the comparison sites.

  23. Outcomes- Child Strengths • Children at intervention sites exhibited more: • Self Control • (ability to experience a range of feelings and express them in appropriate ways); • Initiative • (self-directed activities; ability to take appropriate actions to get his/her needs met); • Attachment • (ability to have a mutual, strong relationship between a child and significant adults).

  24. Outcomes- Parents’ views • Results of focus groups suggest parents have positive view of the project • Parents reported: • Reduced stigma • because the Mental Health Professional was available at childcare center • Increased ease of working with the consultants • because of their first hand observations of the children • Willingness of the consultants to accommodate their schedule

  25. Arkansas Pilot ProjectLessons Learned • ECMH consultation is an evolving field • The Arkansas pilot project is cutting edge • Our approach has evolved: • based on our lessons learned and • new guidelines and guidance from experts in the field

  26. Lessons Learned:Clear Definitions Needed • Providers and Partners need a clear understanding of what mental health consultation is and is not • This differs depending on who is providing the services • Our definitions and scope of work evolved • Less focus on direct intervention; more focus on skill-building among childcare center staff

  27. Lessons Learned:Specialized Knowledge is Necessary • Consultants Need Specialized Knowledge • Normal child growth and development • Atypical behavior • Basic concepts of social-emotional development • Family systems • Early childhood and early intervention systems • Child care quality standards • Adult learning principles • Often NOT Covered in Training Programs for Mental Health Professionals

  28. Lessons Learned:Training is critical • Training has been critical to the success of the project • Both for Mental Health and Childcare Professionals • Arkansas needs a broader, ongoing process and curriculum for training consultants • Our trainings included Early Childhood Liaisons from all Community Mental Health Centers • Staff turnover requires that ongoing training be available

  29. Lessons Learned:Developmental Disability Providers • Issues arising with Developmental Disability Providers are different • Setting/staffing patterns are different • Specialized knowledge related to specific disabilities is needed • The typical consultation model may need to be modified in these settings

  30. Moving Forward • In the 2008-2009 school year, we engaged all new childcare partners • Primarily licensed, community based providers • Not Head Start or state-funded Pre-k • Want to determine if project has similar/better results with these childcare providers

  31. A Parent’s Perspective In the words of a parent: “The effect [Mental Health Consultants] can have on every child, even if it’s not a large problem, it’s sometimes a life changing effect”

  32. Contact Info and Acknowledgments Funding: Supported with quality dollars from the federal child care development fund Partners: Arkansas Head Start Collaboration Office For questions, contact Nikki Conners-Burrow at connersnicolaa@uams.edu or 501-682-9900

More Related