The Family is the Patient: Promoting Early Childhood Mental Health in Pediatric Care

Author:

Buka Stephen L.1,Beers Lee S.23,Biel Matthew G.4,Counts Nathaniel Z.56,Hudziak James7,Parade Stephanie H.89,Paris Ruth10,Seifer Ronald11,Drury Stacy S.121314

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, Rhode Island

2. Children’s National Hospital, Washington, District of Columbia

3. Child Health Advocacy Institute, Washington, District of Columbia

4. Departments of Psychiatry and Pediatrics, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, District of Columbia

5. Mental Health America, Alexandria, Virginia

6. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, The Bronx, New York

7. Division of Child Psychiatry, Vermont Center for Children, Youth, and Families, Larner College of Medicine, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont

8. Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island

9. Bradley/Hasbro Children’s Research Center, Bradley Hospital, East Providence, Rhode Island

10. Boston University School of Social Work, Boston, Massachusetts

11. Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina

12. Departments of Psychiatry

13. Pediatrics, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana

14. Children’s Hospital New Orleans, New Orleans, Louisiana

Abstract

Advances in developmental psychology, child psychiatry, and allied disciplines have pointed to events and experiences in the early years as the origin of many adult mental health challenges. Yet, children’s mental health services still largely lack a developmental or prevention-focused orientation, with most referrals to mental health professionals occurring late, once problems are well established. An early childhood mental health system rooted in the principles of life-course health development would take a very different approach to designing, testing, and implementing prevention and intervention strategies directed toward early child mental health. Priorities for such a system include supporting healthy family environments, parent–child and family relationships, parents’ emotional/behavioral health, and family routines as a means of providing the best possible neurobiological foundation for mental health across the life span. The system would include proactive, trauma-informed, multidisciplinary care, with integrated mental health and social services support embedded in pediatric primary care settings. Novel intervention approaches in need of further research include 2-generational dyadic interventions designed to improve the mental health of parents and children, mental health-oriented telemedicine, and contingency management (CM) strategies. Integral to this Life Course Health Development reformulation is a commitment by all organizations supporting children to primordial and primary prevention strategies to reduce racial and socioeconomic disparities in all settings. We contend that it is the family, not the individual child, that ought to be the identified target of these redesigned approaches, delivered through a transformed pediatric system with anticipated benefits for multiple health outcomes across the life course.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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