Framing the work: A coparenting model for guiding infant mental health engagement with families

Author:

McHale James1ORCID,Tissot Herve2ORCID,Mazzoni Silvia3,Hedenbro Monica4,Salman‐Engin Selin5,Philipp Diane A.6,Darwiche Joëlle7,Keren Miri8,Collins Russia1,Coates Erica9ORCID,Mensi Martina10,Corboz‐Warnery Antoinette7,Fivaz‐Depeursinge Elisabeth7

Affiliation:

1. University of South Florida St. Petersburg USA

2. Lausanne University Hospital Prilly Switzerland

3. Sapienza University of Rome Rome Italy

4. Karolinska Institutet Stockholm Sweden

5. Bilkent University Ankara Turkey

6. University of Toronto Toronto Canada

7. University of Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland

8. Tel‐Aviv Sackler Medical School Petakh Tikva Israel

9. Georgetown University Medical Center Washington USA

10. National Neurological Institute C. Mondino Pavia Italy

Abstract

AbstractWhen working with families of infants and toddlers, intentionally looking beyond dyadic child‐parent relationship functioning to conceptualize the child's socioemotional adaptation within their broader family collective can enhance the likelihood that clinical gains will be supported and sustained. However, there has been little expert guidance regarding how best to frame infant‐family mental health therapeutic encounters for the adults responsible for the child's care and upbringing in a manner that elevates their mindfulness about and their resolve to strengthen the impact of their coparenting collective. This article describes a new collaborative initiative organized by family‐oriented infant mental health professionals across several different countries, all of whom bring expansive expertise assessing and working with coparenting and triangular family dynamics. The Collaborative's aims are to identify a means for framing initial infant mental health encounters and intakes with families with the goal of assessing and raising family consciousness about the relevance of coparenting. Initial points of convergence and growing points identified by the Collaborative for subsequent field study are addressed.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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