538 results on '"infant mental health"'
Search Results
2. Reflective supervision and reflective practice in infant mental health: A scoping review of a diverse body of literature.
- Author
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Tobin M, Carney S, and Rogers E
- Subjects
- Child, Infant, Humans, Health Personnel psychology, Cognitive Reflection, Thinking, Mental Health, Mental Health Services
- Abstract
Reflective practice is a core component of Infant Mental Health (IMH) training and work in the form of reflective supervision/consultation (RS/C). RS/C supports and facilitates relationship-based practice, and is considered to help prevent burnout and promote work satisfaction. In response to an identified gap in empirical research on RS/C, this scoping review aimed to give an overview of the broad range of study designs and outcomes by systematically charting empirical studies on RS/C in IMH-based work with children and families. Searches of Academic Search Complete, CINAHL, MEDLINE, APA PsychArticles, APA PsycInfo, and Web of Science were supplemented with a Google Scholar search and citation searching. Following title/abstract screening (n = 233) and full-text review (n = 168), 35 reports met criteria for inclusion. Key findings were organized into four categories: Essential components and processes of RS/C; Experiences and outcomes of RS/C; Emerging issues in RS/C literature; and Measuring, researching, and reporting on RS/C. Results describe the components and experience of engaging in quality RS/C, and show that practitioners generally experience RS/C as supportive and beneficial. The existing literature has some methodological limitations and further empirical research is needed on outcomes of RS/C. Practice implications and potential future research directions are discussed., (© 2023 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2024
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3. An exploration of staff experience and participation in a perinatal and infant mental health network group.
- Author
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O'Leary N, Wynne F, and Moore P
- Subjects
- Adult, Infant, Pregnancy, Female, Humans, Qualitative Research, Emotions, Clinical Competence, Mental Health, Mental Health Services
- Abstract
Objectives: Infant mental health (IMH), an area which focuses on the social and emotional development of infants in the context of the parent-infant relationship, has become an increasingly prominent field of both research and clinical practice worldwide. IMH network groups are initiatives which aim to facilitate continuous learning in the IMH approach, provide an opportunity for case discussion and encourage reflective practice. This study aimed to explore the experiences of staff working within an adult mental health (AMH) service and their participation in a perinatal IMH network group (PIMH-NG)., Methods: This study had a qualitative research design and the data were collected using a focus group methodology. Participants were recruited from a PIMH-NG which aimed to provide staff working within an AMH setting with the opportunity for continuous development of IMH knowledge. The data were analysed using thematic analysis., Results: The data gathered from the focus group indicated that staff participating in a PIMH-NG enhanced their clinical skill, reflective practice and supported the dissemination of IMH knowledge throughout their respective teams. The PIMH-NG facilitated this work by providing the opportunity for continuous learning, reflective group discussion and ongoing peer support., Conclusions: The findings of this study indicate that incorporating elements of an IMH model into AMH services can be beneficial for staff, service users and overall service delivery and development. These findings may be used to develop the structure and content of future network groups of this nature.
- Published
- 2023
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4. Ethical dilemmas in infant mental health: Examples from child protection, home visiting, and medical contexts.
- Author
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Zeanah CH, Korfmacher J, Lim I, Steier A, and Zeanah PD
- Subjects
- Pregnancy, Female, Infant, Child, Humans, Child, Preschool, Australia, Infant Health, Caregivers psychology, House Calls, Mental Health, Postnatal Care
- Abstract
Infant mental health is explicitly relational and strengths based as a field. Ethical dilemmas in infant mental health have received insufficient attention at the level of infant mental health professionals (IMHP) and other professionals caring for infants who must grapple with questions of when caregivers and infants have conflicting interests. We present composite cases drawn from North American and Australian contexts, using three systems in which such conflicts may commonly manifest: child protection, home visiting, and medical settings. The field of infant and early childhood mental health (IECMH) should begin to discuss such dilemmas and how best to balance the needs of caregivers and infants when they are not well aligned., (© 2023 The Authors. Infant Mental Health Journal published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2023
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5. Current approaches and future directions for addressing ethics in infant and early childhood mental health.
- Author
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Zeanah PD, Steier A, Lim I, Korfmacher J, and Zeanah CH
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, Child Health ethics, Infant Health ethics, Mental Health ethics
- Abstract
In this paper, we consider whether the field of infant and early childhood mental health (IECMH) needs its own code of ethics. We begin by describing unique features of infant and early childhood mental health (IECMH) and the diverse strategies that the field has developed to address complex clinical dilemmas, among them workforce development, clinical supports, policy statements, and statements of ethical values. Because of the field's interdisciplinary nature, we also consider how various contributing professions and organizations address ethical issues. While these are important resources that can inform ethical decision-making, we identify some of the limitations of the current approaches. We argue that it is time for the field of IECMH to take an intentional, systematic approach to directly address the complex and unique ethical dilemmas faced by infant and early childhood mental health practitioners, and we grapple with some of the challenges developing such a code might entail. We suggest several avenues for better understanding the scope of ethical issues and ethical decision-making processes in IECMH that could be used to support developing an ethics code that is responsive to the unique and challenging world of infant and early childhood mental health., (© 2023 The Authors. Infant Mental Health Journal published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2023
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6. The ethics of infant and early childhood mental health practice.
- Author
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Lim I, Korfmacher J, Steier A, Zeanah C, and Zeanah PD
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Child, Humans, Infant, Beneficence, Social Justice, Personal Autonomy, Mental Health
- Abstract
Ethics is concerned with the basis for moral judgments of "right" and "wrong" and is central to the clinical endeavor. Many clinicians integrate ethical estimations into their work without much conscious awareness. However, explicit use of ethical principles and frameworks can help navigate clinical decision-making when there is a sense of moral conflict or ambiguity about the "right" course of action. This article aims to highlight the key concepts and principles in clinical ethics as they apply to IECMH practice and stimulate a bigger conversation in the profession around how to support each other to maintain high ethical standards in working with young children and their families. Specifically, the authors consider the relevance of Beauchamp and Childress' four principles framework (respect for autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and justice), and address some of the special ethical challenges in the field, namely, the vulnerability of the infant, the need for a competent workforce, caring for caregivers, and the problem of multiple patients. Finally, the role of infant rights is briefly explored, noting the significant interest and debate that has been generated by the publication of the World Association of Infant Mental Health's Position Paper on the Rights of Infants., (© 2023 The Authors. Infant Mental Health Journal published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2023
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7. Reflections on the Infant Mental Health Endorsement ® process in Virginia.
- Author
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Dye K, Spence C, and Brock JR
- Subjects
- Humans, Infant, Male, Female, Child, Preschool, Virginia, Health Personnel psychology, Mental Health, Infant Health
- Abstract
This study was conducted to gather information to inform key stakeholders in Virginia's Early Childhood Mental Health workforce who are involved in the Infant Mental Health Endorsement
® . An "Endorsement® indicates an individual's efforts to specialize in the promotion and practice of infant or early childhood mental health within his/her own chosen discipline" (Virginia Association for Infant Mental Health, 2021). The following research questions guided this study: (1) who is part of the infant mental health endorsed workforce in Virginia; (2) what are the benefits and barriers to the Endorsement® process. A total of 115 individuals who were or are involved in the Endorsement® as endorsees or advisors were participants in the study. Participants cited many benefits of obtaining their Infant Mental Health Endorsement® , including general professional development and connecting to other professionals in the field. Barriers to obtaining the Endorsement® included time and financial restraints related to obtaining reflective supervision from a qualified Reflective Supervisor. Results from the study will be used to inform the Infant Mental Health Endorsement® process, and applied to the Early Childhood Mental Health Endorsement® in 2023., (© 2023 The Authors. Infant Mental Health Journal published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)- Published
- 2023
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8. Clinical use and implementation of the diagnostic classification of mental health and developmental disorders of infancy and early childhood.
- Author
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Williams ME, Rediker AM, and Mulrooney K
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Curriculum, Hispanic or Latino, Policy, United States, Developmental Disabilities diagnosis, Mental Health
- Abstract
The Diagnostic Classification of Mental Health and Developmental Disorders of Infancy and Early Childhood (DC: 0-5) was developed to provide a framework for diagnosis of infants and young children, and a training curriculum supports implementation of the manual in clinical practice. This study surveyed 100 mental health clinicians (93% female and 53% Latinx/Hispanic) who had completed training in the DC: 0-5 classification system and worked with infants/young children and their families primarily in urban, public insurance-funded, community mental health settings in the United States. The survey explored their use of the diagnostic manual in clinical practice as well as supports and barriers to implementation. Survey results indicated a high level of adoption of the manual in clinical practice, although all five axes and the cultural formulation were used less often than the Axis I Clinical Disorders section. Barriers to implementation included systemic issues such as agency and billing requirements necessitating simultaneous use of other diagnostic manuals, lack of supports and expertise within their agency, and difficulty making time to fully utilize the manual. The findings suggest that policy and systems changes may be needed to enable clinicians to fully integrate the DC: 0-5 into their case conceptualizations., (© 2023 The Authors. Infant Mental Health Journal published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2023
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9. Infant mental health home visiting: intervention dosage and therapist experience interact to support improvements in maternal reflective functioning.
- Author
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Stacks AM, Jester JM, Wong K, Huth-Bocks A, Brophy-Herb H, Lawler J, Riggs J, Ribaudo J, Muzik M, and Rosenblum KL
- Subjects
- Child, Female, House Calls, Humans, Infant, Mothers psychology, Parents psychology, Mental Health, Object Attachment
- Abstract
This study examined changes in parental reflective functioning (PRF) among mothers enrolled in Infant Mental Health-Home Visiting (IMH-HV) and explored whether parental risk, treatment dosage or therapist experience predicted change in PRF. Participants included 75 mothers and their children who were enrolled in IMH-HV delivered by Community Mental Health therapists. Results indicated significant improvements in PRF from baseline to 12-months. Maternal demographic and psychosocial risk, therapist experience and treatment dosage were not directly associated with changes in PRF. However, Mothers who received more treatment sessions from therapists with six or more years of experience demonstrated the greatest improvements in PRF, while mothers who received more treatment sessions from therapists who had been practicing IMH for less than 15 months showed a decline in PRF. Therapists working with very high-risk families may need specific training and ongoing reflective supervision over a period of years to promote improvement in PRF.
- Published
- 2022
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10. A review and analysis of the components of potentially effective perinatal mental health interventions for infant development and mother-infant relationship outcomes.
- Author
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Newton K, Taylor Buck E, Weich S, and Uttley L
- Subjects
- Child, Child Development, Female, Humans, Infant, Pregnancy, Mental Health, Mothers psychology
- Abstract
Children of mothers with serious mental health difficulties are at increased risk of developing mental health difficulties themselves in their own lifetime. Specialist interventions delivered in perinatal mental health services offer an opportunity to support the infant's development and long-term mental health. This review aimed to systematically evaluate the shared elements of successful perinatal mental health interventions that underpin improved outcomes for infants whose mothers experience perinatal mental health difficulties. Nine electronic databases were searched comprehensively for relevant controlled studies of perinatal mental health interventions, and a narrative synthesis undertaken to assess whether statistically significant benefits were noted. Sixteen studies, trialing 19 interventions, were analyzed using a narrative approach and grouped according to reported effectiveness. Eight interventions demonstrated significant improvements in infant outcomes and/or mother-infant relationship outcomes and were used to inform the analysis of the included interventions' components. While the interventions identified were diverse, there were common components which potentially underpin successful interventions for infants whose mothers are experiencing mental health difficulties, including: facilitation of positive Mother×Infant interactions; helping mothers to understand their infant's perspective or inner world; and the use of video feedback.
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- 2022
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11. Infant and early childhood mental health in the context of COVID-19 special issue: A brief overview from the editors.
- Author
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Brophy-Herb HE, Barlow J, Foley M, Lawler J, and von Klitzing K
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Mental Health
- Published
- 2022
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12. "Nobody Listened". Mothers' Experiences and Needs Regarding Professional Support Prior to Their Admission to an Infant Mental Health Day Clinic.
- Author
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Nuyts T, Van Haeken S, Crombag N, Singh B, Ayers S, Garthus-Niegel S, Braeken MAKA, and Bogaerts A
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Infant, Mother-Child Relations, Pregnancy, Qualitative Research, Retrospective Studies, Social Support, Mental Health, Mothers
- Abstract
Challenges during the perinatal period can lead to maternal distress, negatively affecting mother-infant interaction. This study aims to retrospectively explore the experiences and needs regarding professional support of mothers with difficulties in mother-infant interaction prior to their admission to an infant mental health day clinic. In-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted with 13 mothers who had accessed an infant mental health day clinic because of persistent severe infant regulatory problems impairing the wellbeing of the infant and the family. Data were transcribed and analyzed using the Qualitative Analysis Guide of Leuven (QUAGOL). Three themes were identified: 'experience of pregnancy, birth, and parenthood'; 'difficult care paths'; and 'needs and their fulfillment'. The first theme consisted of three subthemes: (1) 'reality does not meet expectations', (2) 'resilience under pressure', and (3) 'despair'. Mothers experienced negative feelings that were in contradiction to the expected positive emotions associated with childbirth and motherhood. Resilience-related problems affected the mother-child relationship, and infants' regulatory capacities. Determined to find solutions, different healthcare providers were consulted. Mothers' search for help was complex and communication between healthcare providers was limited because of a fragmented care provision. This hindered the continuity of care and appropriate referrals. Another pitfall was the lack of a broader approach, with the emphasis on the medical aspects without attention to the mother-child dyad. An integrated care pathway focusing on the early detection of resilience-related problems and sufficient social support can be crucial in the prevention and early detection of perinatal and infant mental health problems.
- Published
- 2021
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13. Sparking collaboration and instilling core competencies through training a statewide workforce in Infant Mental Health: Report from the field.
- Author
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Dealy J, Robinson J, Eaves T, and Maderia H
- Subjects
- Humans, Infant, Infant Health, Workforce, Mental Disorders, Mental Health
- Abstract
Fostering collaboration and instilling core competencies across the diverse Infant Mental Health systems and understanding their training needs are crucial endeavors to support the delivery of evidence-based care and treatment continuity for infants and their families. This paper details the Connecticut Association for Infant Mental Health's use of a comprehensive infant mental health training series as a vehicle to achieve these aims. The training series, and the steps taken to execute and evaluate it are described to provide a framework for future collaborative training initiatives. Evaluation efforts were designed to address knowledge sought and gained and included pre and posttraining tests, participant reports of their training goals and needs, and interviews with trainers regarding the series' strengths and limitations. Findings suggest significant improvements in participants' knowledge of training content across trainings. Participants indicated a desire for trainings on working with the whole family and their plan to integrate skills from the training into their work. Recommendations from trainers and evaluators are provided to spark future trainings and collaborative efforts., (© 2021 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2021
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14. Maintaining Momentum in Infant Mental Health Research During COVID-19: Adapting Observational Assessments.
- Author
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Tesson S, Swinsburg D, and Kasparian NA
- Subjects
- Humans, Infant, Pandemics, Parents, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Mental Health
- Abstract
Understanding the potential effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the developing parent-infant relationship is a priority, especially for medically-fragile infants and their caregivers who face distinct challenges and stressors. Observational assessments can provide important insights into parent-child behaviors and relational risk; however, stay-at-home directives and physical distancing measures associated with COVID-19 have significantly limited opportunities for in-person observational parent-infant assessment. To maintain momentum in our research program during the pandemic, we rapidly pivoted to remote, technology-assisted parent-infant observational assessments. In this commentary, we offer a series of strategies and recommendations to assist researchers in adapting observational parent-infant paradigms. We also discuss the benefits, challenges, and limitations of distance-delivered assessments, and offer considerations for clinical service provision and future research during and post the COVID-19 pandemic. ., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Pediatric Psychology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
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15. Implications of the COVID-19 Pandemic Response for Breastfeeding, Maternal Caregiving Capacity and Infant Mental Health.
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Gribble K, Marinelli KA, Tomori C, and Gross MS
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- Female, Global Health, Health Policy, Humans, Infant, Infant Care ethics, Infant Care psychology, Infant Care standards, Infant, Newborn, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical prevention & control, Milk, Human virology, Object Attachment, Pandemics, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious therapy, Breast Feeding ethics, Breast Feeding methods, Breast Feeding psychology, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 psychology, COVID-19 therapy, COVID-19 transmission, Infant Care methods, Infant Health, Mental Health, Mother-Child Relations psychology
- Published
- 2020
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16. The Michigan infant mental health home visiting model.
- Author
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Weatherston DJ and Ribaudo J
- Subjects
- Caregivers psychology, Child, Child Health Services legislation & jurisprudence, Child, Preschool, Female, History, 20th Century, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Mental Health Services legislation & jurisprudence, Michigan, Parent-Child Relations, Parents psychology, Child Health Services history, House Calls, Infant Health legislation & jurisprudence, Mental Health legislation & jurisprudence, Mental Health Services history
- Abstract
Selma Fraiberg's pioneering work with infants, toddlers, and families over 40 years ago led to the development of a field in which professionals from multiple disciplines learned to work with or on behalf of infants, very young children, their parents, and the relationships that bind them together. The intent was to promote social and emotional health through enhancing the security of early developing parent-child relationships in the first years of life (Fraiberg, 2018). Called infant mental health (IMH), practitioners from fields of health, education, social work, psychology, human development, nursing, pediatrics, and psychiatry specialize in supporting the optimal development of infants and the developing relationship between infants and their caregivers. When a baby is born into optimal circumstances, to parents free of undue economic and psychological stressors and who are emotionally ready to provide care and nurturing for an infant's needs, an IMH approach may be offered as promotion or prevention, with the goal of supporting new parent(s) in developing confidence in their capacity to understand and meet the needs of the tiny human they are coming to know and care for. However, when parental history is fraught with abandonment, loss, abuse or neglect, or the current environment is replete with economic insecurity, threats to survival due to interpersonal or community violence, social isolation, mental illness, or substance abuse, the work of the IMH therapist may require intervention or intensive treatment and becomes more psychotherapeutic in nature. The underlying therapeutic goal is to create a context in which the baby develops within the environment of a parent's nurturing care without the psychological impingement that parental history of trauma or loss or current stressors such as isolation, poverty, or the birth of a child with special needs, can incur., (© 2020 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2020
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17. A scoping review of parental experiences caring for their hospitalised medically fragile infants.
- Author
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Mackay LJ, Benzies KM, Barnard C, and Hayden KA
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Anxiety, Health Personnel, Humans, Infant, Stress, Psychological, Mental Health, Parents
- Abstract
Aim: To synthesise and summarise evidence from published research articles regarding parental experiences caring for their hospitalised medically fragile infant., Methods: We searched four electronic databases in April 2018 using three main concepts individually and in combination: infant, medically fragile, parents. We examined articles about experiences of parents caring for the medically fragile infant in a hospital setting. We conducted thematic analysis on the 34 included articles., Results: Parents experienced high rates of depressive symptoms, depression, stress, anxiety, distress and post traumatic stress. Parent-infant interactions were disrupted. Parents experienced loss and worry in response to the diagnosis of their infant, which altered or delayed parental role attainment. Supports and coping were key for parents to manage their stress., Conclusion: Parents of medically fragile infants experience multiple stressors, elevated levels of mental health difficulties, trouble attaining their parental role and often struggle to cope. Development of interventional research is needed to test targeted strategies aimed at reducing parental stress and mental health difficulties. Interventions should include: screening for parental mental health, psychological support, healthcare professional education, strategies to enhance parent-infant interactions and improved relationship competencies among healthcare professionals., (© 2019 Foundation Acta Paediatrica. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
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18. Parenting stress and its correlates in an infant mental health unit: a cross-sectional study.
- Author
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Tedgård E, Tedgård U, Råstam M, and Johansson BA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child Development physiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Mental Health, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Parents psychology, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
Background: An infant's development is closely linked to the relationship they have with their parents. Parenting stress, affective disorder, and an upbringing with substance-abusing parents can affect parenting quality and increase the risk of children developing behavioral, mental and social problems. The overall aim of the study was to investigate how parents of children attending an outpatient Infant Mental Health (IMH) unit rate their own psychological health and parenting stress, and to explore predictors of parenting stress. Methods: The sample comprised 197 parents, 129 mothers and 68 fathers, referred with their infant/toddler to an outpatient IMH unit for interplay treatment. On admission, the parents completed self-report questionnaires concerning their own mental health problems and parenting stress. Results: The mothers reported significantly more psychiatric symptoms and parenting stress than the fathers. Fathers with substance-abusing parents had often experienced divorce in the family of origin, had a low level of education, and had often experienced trauma. Depression was a predictor for parenting stress for both mothers and fathers. Conclusion: The parents' situation was strained, presenting a variety of psychiatric symptoms and high levels of parenting stress, making assessment of parental health before starting treatment important. The mothers' situations were more serious compared with the fathers', and for both parents depression was a significant predictor for parenting stress. To increase the chances of a positive treatment outcome for the child, both parents should be included in the treatment.
- Published
- 2020
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19. How do parents perceive and utilize knowledge of their infant's mental health? A systematic review.
- Author
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Peters J, Skirton H, Morgan J, and Clark M
- Subjects
- Culture, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Child Development physiology, Mental Health, Parents psychology
- Abstract
Infant mental health (IMH) is a growing area of practice for health, education and social care practitioners, as links are increasingly made between experiences in the early years and subsequent child development, mental health and well-being. It is unclear how parents perceive IMH and use knowledge relating to IMH with their children. We conducted a systematic review, the aim of which was to determine parents' perceptions of IMH and how they utilize this knowledge with their infants. We undertook a search of relevant databases and journals and from an initial list of 4147 potential papers, identified 16 for the review. Original data were extracted and presented in a table, and the content of all papers was analysed thematically and presented in narrative form. Three main themes emerged from the available research: knowledge and understanding of child development, influences of society and culture, and interpretation of emotions and expressions. Our results indicate that research is limited in terms of parental perspectives of IMH and how they obtain and use this knowledge. Further research is needed to investigate this topic to maximize mental well-being in infancy and later life.
- Published
- 2019
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20. Gentle remedies: Restoring faith in the first step of nonpharmacological infant mental health care for the prevention and treatment of "disruptive behavior".
- Author
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Libster MM
- Subjects
- Environment, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Holistic Health, Mental Health, Parenting psychology, Problem Behavior psychology
- Abstract
Parents and healthcare providers are reported to be "desperate" for solutions for dealing with temper tantrums and other extreme "disruptive behaviors." Reports state that at least 10,000 and as many as 20,000 infants under the age of two in 2014 were prescribed drugs such as risperidone, quetiapine, and other antipsychotic medications, suggesting that parents may have lost faith in their inner abilities to create an environment for their infant. Dr. Maria Montessori, concluded from her work that the nervous troubles of many "difficult" children can be traced to one of the most "harmful forms of repressive action" an adult can take, that of "interference" with or interrupting a child's self-chosen activity. This paper explores alternatives to adult interruption that begins with shushing crying infants and may extend to demanding medications with the intention of stopping behaviors. It discusses a tiered infant mental health care system in which conservative care, the first tier or step can be restored with nonpharmacological gentle remedies. Gentle remedies are neither better than nor are they a replacement for pharmaceutical drugs, the fourth and last step of the tiered system due to their known short term and potential long-term risks. The gentle remedies first step approach begins with parents engaging in environment and lifestyle management. Examples of other gentle remedies discussed for use in helping infants to discharge stress and frustration include lullabies, hot water bottles, infant massage education, oatmeal baths and other herbal simples, and Bach Flower Remedies., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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21. Epigenetics, maternal prenatal psychosocial stress, and infant mental health.
- Author
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DeSocio JE
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, Prenatal Care, United States, Epigenomics methods, Infant Health, Mental Health, Mothers psychology, Pregnancy Complications, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
This paper provides a summary of literature on epigenetic effects and infant health outcomes of maternal psychosocial stress during pregnancy. A search of literature yielded a large body of publications between 2008 and 2018. Relevant articles were selected, and additional sources were located from ancestry searches of reference lists. Results implicate maternal prenatal stress as a source of epigenetic mechanisms that affect fetal brain development and program risk for emotional dysregulation and mental disorders over a lifetime and across generations. Implications for nursing practice are explored at multiple levels of policy advocacy, public education, primary prevention, screening and intervention., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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22. Predictive validity of a service-setting-based measure to identify infancy mental health problems: a population-based cohort study.
- Author
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Ammitzbøll J, Thygesen LC, Holstein BE, Andersen A, and Skovgaard AM
- Subjects
- Attention, Autistic Disorder diagnosis, Checklist, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Infant, International Classification of Diseases, Male, Parents, Sensitivity and Specificity, Mass Screening methods, Mental Health, Parent-Child Relations
- Abstract
Measures to identify infancy mental health problems are essential to guide interventions and reduce the risk of developmental psychopathology in early years. We investigated a new service-setting-based measure the Copenhagen Infant Mental Health Screening (CIMHS) within the general child health surveillance by community health nurses (CHN). The study population of 2973 infants was assessed by CIMHS at age 9-10 months. A subsample of 416 children was examined at age 1½ years, using parent interviews including the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL 1½-5), Check List of Autism and Toddlers (CHAT), Infant-Toddler Symptom Checklist (ITSCL), and the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development (BSID) and observations of behavior, communication, and interaction. Child mental disorders were diagnosed according to ICD-10 and parent-child relationship disorders according to DC:0-3R. Statistical analyses included logistic regression analyses adjusted and weighted to adjust for sampling and bias. CIMHS problems of sleep, feeding and eating, emotions, attention, communication, and language were associated with an up to fivefold increased risk of child mental disorders across the diagnostic spectrum of ICD-10 diagnoses. Homo-type continuity was seen in problems of sleep and feeding and eating being associated with a threefold increased risk of disorders within the same area, OR 3.0 (95% CI 1.6-5.4) and OR 2.7 (95% CI 1.7-4.2), respectively. The sensitivity at high CIMHS problem scores was 32% and specificity 86%. In summary, CIMHS identify a broad range of infants' mental health problems that are amenable to guide intervention within the general child health surveillance.
- Published
- 2018
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23. Infant Mental Health Training for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry: A Comprehensive Model.
- Author
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Osofsky JD, Drell MJ, Osofsky HJ, Hansel TC, and Williams A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adolescent Psychiatry education, Child, Child, Preschool, Education, Medical, Graduate, Humans, Infant, Child Development physiology, Child Psychiatry education, Internship and Residency, Mental Health education
- Published
- 2017
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24. Improving outcomes for babies and toddlers in child welfare: A model for infant mental health intervention and collaboration.
- Author
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Chinitz S, Guzman H, Amstutz E, Kohchi J, and Alkon M
- Subjects
- Caregivers, Child, Foster psychology, Child, Preschool, Female, Foster Home Care organization & administration, Foster Home Care psychology, Humans, Infant, Male, New York City, Parenting, Urban Population, Child Development, Child Welfare psychology, Mental Health, Psychology, Child, Social Work organization & administration
- Abstract
Children under three comprise a sizable and growing proportion of foster care placements. Very young children who enter the child welfare system experience disruptions of critical attachments that are essential to this formative stage of brain development, as well as other traumatic events, leaving them at great risk for lifelong impairments. To reverse these concerning outcomes, babies who have been removed from their homes require intensive, relationship-based interventions that promote secure attachment to a primary caregiver and holistic attention the child's developmental needs. Child welfare decision-makers must be informed of infant brain development and knowledgeable about the particular needs and circumstances of each child. This article describes a model with these features that has been developed and tested in the Bronx, New York, one of the nation's poorest urban counties with high rates of foster care. The Project utilizes evidence-based Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP) as its core intervention, and emphasizes collaboration and information sharing- driven by the CPP clinician- with judges, child welfare workers, attorneys and other social service and mental health providers, thereby encouraging developmentally and relationally informed case planning and permanency decisions. The model is evaluated using pre and post treatment psychosocial measures and program outcome data. Results indicate improvement in parenting interactions, positive child welfare outcomes (including increased rates of reunification, fewer returns to foster care), and improved safety and wellbeing. Results highlight the need for child welfare practices to be more closely aligned with the current science of infant brain development, and to incorporate a specialized approach to address the unique needs of infants., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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25. How does video interaction guidance contribute to infant and parental mental health and well-being?
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Kennedy H, Ball K, and Barlow J
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Infant, Object Attachment, Mental Health, Parent-Child Relations, Parents psychology, Personal Satisfaction
- Abstract
This article describes the contribution of video interaction guidance (VIG) to the development of infant and parental and VIG practitioners' mental health and well-being. The theoretical core of VIG was depicted in terms of concepts such as intersubjectivity, attunement and mediated learning. The way the VIG principles alongside the underpinning values and beliefs promote a process of attunement between parent and infant, the VIG practitioner and parent, and the VIG practitioner and supervisor is described. This article also describes some of the evidence about the effectiveness of video feedback techniques more generally and the way in which the underpinning theory of change enables VIG to target key ports of entry in terms of areas that have been highlighted by numerous epidemiological studies as being important in terms of supporting or derailing infant attachment security. A case study is used to demonstrate the way in which VIG can be integrated within broader therapeutic approaches such as parent-infant psychotherapy to support the interaction of parents who have been deeply traumatised in childhood. It also demonstrates how the parallel process of practitioner 'attunement' to mother is key to the mother's recovery and her new ability to form attuned relationships herself with her children and other adults.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. REFLECTING ON THE PRACTICE OF INFANT MENTAL HEALTH AND THE REDUCTION OF RISK IN INFANCY AND EARLY PARENTHOOD: AN ESSAY.
- Author
-
Weatherston DJ
- Subjects
- Child Health Services, Fathers psychology, Health Personnel psychology, Humans, Infant, Male, Mental Health Services, Father-Child Relations, Infant Health, Mental Health, Parenting psychology, Risk Reduction Behavior
- Abstract
This essay discusses infant mental health (IMH) as well as its origins and relational framework. The author then reflects, professionally and personally, on the meaning of psychological vulnerability of boys under 5 years of age, the importance of early caregiving relationships to the reduction of risk, and implications for education and training in the IMH field., (© 2016 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. PARALLEL MODELS OF ASSESSMENT: INFANT MENTAL HEALTH AND THERAPEUTIC ASSESSMENT MODELS INTERSECT THROUGH EARLY CHILDHOOD CASE STUDIES.
- Author
-
Gart N, Zamora I, and Williams ME
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Models, Psychological, Parents psychology, Mental Disorders therapy, Mental Health
- Abstract
Therapeutic Assessment (TA; S.E. Finn & M.E. Tonsager, 1997; J.D. Smith, 2010) is a collaborative, semistructured model that encourages self-discovery and meaning-making through the use of assessment as an intervention approach. This model shares core strategies with infant mental health assessment, including close collaboration with parents and caregivers, active participation of the family, a focus on developing new family stories and increasing parents' understanding of their child, and reducing isolation and increasing hope through the assessment process. The intersection of these two theoretical approaches is explored, using case studies of three infants/young children and their families to illustrate the application of TA to infant mental health. The case of an 18-month-old girl whose parents fear that she has bipolar disorder illustrates the core principles of the TA model, highlighting the use of assessment intervention sessions and the clinical approach to preparing assessment feedback. The second case follows an infant with a rare genetic syndrome from ages 2 to 24 months, focusing on the assessor-parent relationship and the importance of a developmental perspective. Finally, assessment of a 3-year-old boy illustrates the development and use of a fable as a tool to provide feedback to a young child about assessment findings and recommendations., (© 2016 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. INFANT MENTAL HEALTH IN THE NEXT DECADE: A CALL FOR ACTION.
- Author
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Tomlinson M
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Patient Advocacy, Pregnancy, Mental Health
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. BUILDING A WORKFORCE COMPETENCY-BASED TRAINING PROGRAM IN INFANT/EARLY CHILDHOOD MENTAL HEALTH.
- Author
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Priddis LE, Matacz R, and Weatherston D
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, Internationality, Western Australia, Health Personnel education, Mental Health education, Pediatrics education
- Abstract
This article describes findings from a project conducted in Western Australia (Mental Health Commission WA, 2015) that investigated the education and training needs of the Infant/Early Childhood Mental Health (I/ECMH) workforce. We examined international training programs and models of delivery in infant mental health, including a review of the current training available in Australia. Data collected from over 60 interviews were analyzed, and a staged delivery model for I/ECMH training and supervision that aligned with the Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health (2014) Competency Guidelines was recommended. These findings led to the purchase of the Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health (2014) for use in Western Australia. In a very short time, use of the Michigan Competency Framework by the Australian Association for Infant Mental Health West Australian Branch Incorporated has begun to change the training and education opportunities for upskilling the infant and early childhood workforce in Western Australia. It has resulted in a map to guide and develop training in the I/ECMH field for individual practitioners and professionals as well as for workplaces that will ultimately benefit Western Australian infants, young children, and their families during the perinatal period and in the early years., (© 2015 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Modulation of prenatal stress via docosahexaenoic acid supplementation: implications for child mental health.
- Author
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Keenan K and Hipwell AE
- Subjects
- Animals, Child, Female, Glucocorticoids adverse effects, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders prevention & control, Pregnancy, Prenatal Care, Stress, Psychological physiopathology, Child Health, Docosahexaenoic Acids administration & dosage, Docosahexaenoic Acids therapeutic use, Mental Health, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects
- Abstract
Pregnant women living in poverty experience chronic and acute stressors that may lead to alterations in circulating glucocorticoids. Experimental evidence from animal models and correlational studies in humans support the hypothesis that prenatal exposure to high levels of glucocorticoids can negatively affect the developing fetus and later emotional and behavioral regulation in the offspring. In this integrative review, recent findings from research in psychiatry, obstetrics, and animal and human experimental studies on the role of docosahexaenoic acid in modulation of the stress response and brain development are discussed. The potential for an emerging field of nutritionally based perinatal preventive interventions for improving offspring mental health is described. Prenatal nutritional interventions may prove to be effective approaches to reducing common childhood mental disorders., (© The Author(s) 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Life Sciences Institute. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Trifecta approach to breastfeeding: clinical care in the integrated mental health model.
- Author
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Bunik M, Dunn DM, Watkins L, and Talmi A
- Subjects
- Consultants, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Breast Feeding methods, Depression, Postpartum therapy, Mental Health, Pediatrics methods
- Abstract
The breastfeeding experience for the mother and infant is often complicated by a constellation of challenges that are difficult for lactation consultants alone to treat. To address this issue, a breastfeeding consultation clinic at Children's Hospital Colorado developed a multidisciplinary team: a pediatrician specializing in breastfeeding medicine, a lactation consultant, and a clinical psychologist specializing in infant mental health and child development. This Trifecta Breastfeeding Approach meets families' needs by addressing the infant's medical care, functional breastfeeding challenges, and the developing mother-infant relationship, and by screening for concurrent pregnancy-related mood disorders. The Approach also recognizes family dynamics and the transition to parenthood within the breastfeeding consultation. Issues of lost expectations, grief, infertility, high-risk infants, and fussiness often need to be addressed. Case examples here illustrate the benefits of this multidisciplinary, integrated health model. This type of integrated care will likely have an increased presence in health care systems as reimbursement for psychologists' fees and innovative models of care continue to emerge.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Infant mental health promotion and the discourse of risk.
- Author
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Lawless A, Coveney J, and MacDougall C
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Congresses as Topic, Humans, Infant, Parent-Child Relations, Qualitative Research, South Australia, Child Development, Health Promotion, Mental Health, Psychology, Child, Risk Reduction Behavior
- Abstract
The field of infant mental health promotion has rapidly developed in academia, health policy and practice. Although there are roots in earlier childhood health and welfare movements, recent developments in infant mental health promotion are distinct and different. This article examines the development and practice of infant mental health promotion in South Australia. A regional, intersectoral forum with a focus on families and young children was used as a case study. In-depth interviews with forum members were analysed using a governmentality lens. Participants identified a range of risks to the healthy development of the infant. The study suggests that the construction of risk acts as a technique of governing, providing the rationale for intervention for the child, the mother and the public's good. It places responsibility on parents to self-govern. Although the influence of broader social contexts is acknowledged, the problematisation of mothering as risk shifts the focus to individual capacity, rather than encompassing the systems and social conditions that support healthy relationships. This research suggests that the representations of risk are a pervasive and potent influence that can act to undermine health promotion efforts that seek to empower and enable people to have more control over their own health., (© 2013 The Authors. Sociology of Health & Illness © 2013 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness/John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Promoting mother-infant interaction and infant mental health in low-income Korean families: attachment-based cognitive behavioral approach.
- Author
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Lee G, McCreary L, Breitmayer B, Kim MJ, and Yang S
- Subjects
- Adult, Case-Control Studies, Child Development physiology, Child, Preschool, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infant, Male, Poverty, Republic of Korea, Risk Assessment, Treatment Outcome, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy methods, Health Promotion, Infant Welfare, Mental Health, Mother-Child Relations psychology
- Abstract
Purpose: This study evaluated the attachment-based cognitive behavioral approach (ACBA) to enhance mother-infant interaction and infant mental health., Design and Methods: This quasi-experimental study used a pre-posttest control group design. Participants were 40 low-income, mother-infant (infant ages 12-36 months) dyads, 20 dyads per group. The ACBA group received 10 weekly 90-min sessions. Dependent variables were changes in mother-infant interaction and infant mental health. Additionally, we explored changes in mothers' attachment security., Results: The groups differed significantly in changes in mother-infant interaction, infant mental health problems, and mothers' attachment security., Practice Implications: ACBA may enhance mother-infant interaction and infants' mental health., (© 2013, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. “Learning to ‘waltz’ rather than ‘wrestle’ … ” : a novel, ultra-brief intervention supporting early child–caregiver relationships.
- Author
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Potter, Hannah, Chadderton, Gemma, Mitchell, Rhonda, and D’Arcy, Zoe
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health services , *INFANT health services , *CAREGIVERS , *MENTAL health , *CHILD development - Abstract
IntroductionAimsMethodResultsConclusionThe quality of the early child–caregiver relationship plays a crucial role in shaping a child’s development. In response to the lack of early intervention provisions for 2–5 year olds, the Leeds Infant Mental Health Service increased their offer to support children up to their fifth birthday (and their caregivers), where relational difficulties impact upon the child’s emotional wellbeing.This paper aims to evaluate the effectiveness of the direct therapeutic work (named ‘Understanding Your Toddler’; UYT), in promoting the child–caregiver relationship.Nineteen families were accepted for UYT, where there was motivation and emotional availability to consider change within the relationship. Thirteen families engaged in the work. The UYT offer adopted a three session, home-visiting model, drawing upon several therapeutic approaches. A two-phased mixed methods design was adopted. Phase I analysed quantitative changes within the relationship. Phase II qualitatively evaluated families and professionals’ experiences of UYT.Paired t-tests and Wilcoxon signed rank analyses illustrated significant differences pre and post UYT in caregiver: goals, confidence, perceptions and feelings of irritation. No significant differences were found in caregiver feelings of warmth. Themes from interviews suggested that the strengths-based approach was valued, and that video work supported caregivers to ‘see the world from their (toddlers’) point of view’.This evaluation contributes to the limited evidence evaluating the efficacy of child–caregiver interventions in practice. Despite the small sample, the UYT model provides a helpful framework (applicable to clinical contexts) to foster early relationships and emotional development of young children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Changing Motherhood in the South African Middle-Class Context.
- Author
-
Mograbi, Rachel Zaidman, Bain, Katherine, and Pretorius, Edmarie
- Subjects
SOCIAL constructionism ,GENDER role ,ACCULTURATION ,QUALITATIVE research ,MENTAL health ,SOUTH Africans ,INTERVIEWING ,MOTHERS ,ATTITUDES of mothers ,PARENTING ,POPULATION geography ,SOCIAL mobility ,SOUND recordings ,MOTHER-infant relationship ,CHILD rearing ,RESEARCH methodology ,COMMUNICATION ,MOTHERHOOD ,CASE studies ,SOCIAL classes ,VIDEO recording ,URBANIZATION - Abstract
Parenting has been found to be highly contextually and culturally determined and there have been calls to research parenting within culture as it is lived. Due to changing social and economic factors, middle-class South African mothers face unique challenges in relation to the navigation of culture and class in child-rearing. Foregrounding the complexity of acculturation, this paper uses social constructionist theory in the analysis of maternal narratives and responses to video-recordings of their interaction with their infants, of a group of middle-class South African mothers from various cultural and racial groups, with an aim to understanding how mothering is changing amongst middle-class South African mothers. The findings suggest that acculturation is complex and influenced by a combination of socioeconomic status, geographical location, contact with other cultural groups and personal emotional experiences of having been parented within a particular culture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Autism in Preschool-Aged Children: The Effects of COVID-19 Lockdown.
- Author
-
Termine, Cristiano, Galli, Vera, Dui, Linda Greta, Berlusconi, Valentina, Lipari, Rossella, Lunardini, Francesca, and Ferrante, Simona
- Subjects
- *
ASPERGER'S syndrome in children , *CROSS-sectional method , *HEALTH literacy , *AUTISM in children , *MENTAL health , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *HEALTH , *BEHAVIOR , *INFORMATION resources , *STAY-at-home orders , *ONLINE education , *SLEEP , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *LEARNING strategies , *COVID-19 pandemic , *ACTIVITIES of daily living , *PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
The COVID-19 lockdown affected children, especially those with autism spectrum disorder, due to the disruption in rehabilitation and educational activities. We conducted a cross-sectional study of 315 preschool-aged children, 35 of which had autism, to investigate this impact. A questionnaire was administered to explore socio-demographic status, familiar/home environment, and COVID-19 exposure. The clinical features of autistic subjects were also examined. Seven variables were considered to describe the effect of pandemic: Remote learning, Behavior changes, Home activities, Sleep habits, Night awakenings, Physical activity, Information about the virus. The lockdown had a significant impact on Remote learning, Behavior changes, and Information about the virus in participants with autism. Moreover, we found a worsening in repetitive movements, echolalia, restricted interests, and aggressive behaviors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. "You go in heavy and you come out light": An interpretative phenomenological analysis of reflective practice experiences in an Irish infant mental health setting.
- Author
-
Tobin, Mary, O'Sullivan, Nicola, and Rogers, Elaine
- Subjects
- *
INFANT health , *MENTAL health , *EXPERIENTIAL learning , *FOCUS groups , *EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
Reflective practice (RP) is a core component of infant mental health (IMH); however, there is limited published empirical research on IMH practitioner experiences of RP. This two‐stage, qualitative, multimodal study explored Irish IMH practitioners' experiences of RP spaces. Visual and verbal data from seven individual interviews and a participatory arts‐based focus group with seven participants (eight participants in total, all white Irish females) were analyzed using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis. Five group experiential themes (Just get on with it; What should I be bringing to this space?; Who are my "hands"?; Taking a step back; and You go in heavy and you come out light) were generated by the analysis. These were used to construct a developmental and experiential model of learning in an RP space. The themes portray how a practitioner's RP experience can change over time: influenced by prior experiences and practice development stage, practitioners move from initial uncertainty, anxiety, and perceived pressure in a busy workload to developing the trust and ability to be vulnerable in an RP space. Through relationships (supervisor/facilitator or group members), a shared safe space can be created, which addresses practitioners' needs for containment, allowing for experiential learning through a process of transformational moments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Increased family psychosocial focus during children’s developmental assessments: a study of parents’ views
- Author
-
Sarah Strøyer de Voss, Philip Michael John Wilson, Ruth Kirk Ertmann, and Gritt Overbeck
- Subjects
Psychosocial ,Wellbeing ,Mental health ,Infant mental health ,Child health ,Preventive care ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Abstract Background Family psychosocial challenges during the early years of a child’s life are associated with later mental and physical health problems for the child. An increased psychosocial focus on parents in routine child developmental assessments may therefore be justified. Methods Participants in this qualitative study included 11 mothers and one parental couple (mother and father) with children aged 9–23 months. Participants were recruited to Project Family Wellbeing through their general practice in Denmark. Twelve interviews were conducted, transcribed and analysed with a deductive approach. The topic guide drew on the core components of the Health Belief Model, which also served as a framework for the coding that was conducted using thematic analysis. Results Results are presented in four themes and 11 subthemes in total. Parents welcome discussion of their psychosocial circumstances during their child’s developmental assessments. Clinicians’ initiatives to address psychosocial challenges and alignment of parents’ and clinicians’ expectations may be required to allow this discussion. A flowing conversation, an open communication style and a trustful relationship facilitate psychosocial discussion. Barriers included short consultation time, concerns about how information was used and when parents found specific psychosocial aspects stigmatising or irrelevant to discuss. Conclusion Enquiry about the family’s psychosocial circumstances in routine developmental assessments is acceptable among parents. Alignment of clinical and parental expectations of developmental assessments could facilitate the process. Future research should examine the predictive validity of the various components of developmental assessments. Trial registration This is a qualitative study. The study participants are part of the cohort from Project Family Wellbeing (FamilieTrivsel). The project’s trial registry number: NCT04129359. Registered October 16th 2019.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. AN EXPLORATION IN DEVELOPING PLAY THERAPY PRACTICE WITH INFANTS AND THEIR FAMILIES.
- Author
-
Greig, Sara
- Subjects
PLAY therapy ,INFANTS ,ATTACHMENT behavior ,MENTAL health ,PARENT participation in child psychotherapy - Abstract
I think back to sitting in the warm dark, an amber glow in the corner of the room and the gentle rise and fall of breath following breath, snuffle, stretch, toe curl, sigh. I remember drifting in the peace of my infant observation, wondering what I was doing as I began the journey to becoming a play therapist. The learning from these surprising, provocative and informative infant observations has remained a deeply important foundation in my work. Fourteen years later, as a play therapist often working together with parents and infants, I remain fascinated by the possibilities that working through play therapy in the very early years can bring to relational and transformational change. This exploration brings together the story of this work to share and learn from together. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
40. Increased family psychosocial focus during children's developmental assessments: a study of parents' views.
- Author
-
Strøyer de Voss, Sarah, Wilson, Philip Michael John, Kirk Ertmann, Ruth, and Overbeck, Gritt
- Subjects
CHILDREN with developmental disabilities ,PARENTS ,HEALTH Belief Model ,WELL-being ,FAMILIES ,MENTAL illness - Abstract
Background: Family psychosocial challenges during the early years of a child's life are associated with later mental and physical health problems for the child. An increased psychosocial focus on parents in routine child developmental assessments may therefore be justified. Methods: Participants in this qualitative study included 11 mothers and one parental couple (mother and father) with children aged 9–23 months. Participants were recruited to Project Family Wellbeing through their general practice in Denmark. Twelve interviews were conducted, transcribed and analysed with a deductive approach. The topic guide drew on the core components of the Health Belief Model, which also served as a framework for the coding that was conducted using thematic analysis. Results: Results are presented in four themes and 11 subthemes in total. Parents welcome discussion of their psychosocial circumstances during their child's developmental assessments. Clinicians' initiatives to address psychosocial challenges and alignment of parents' and clinicians' expectations may be required to allow this discussion. A flowing conversation, an open communication style and a trustful relationship facilitate psychosocial discussion. Barriers included short consultation time, concerns about how information was used and when parents found specific psychosocial aspects stigmatising or irrelevant to discuss. Conclusion: Enquiry about the family's psychosocial circumstances in routine developmental assessments is acceptable among parents. Alignment of clinical and parental expectations of developmental assessments could facilitate the process. Future research should examine the predictive validity of the various components of developmental assessments. Trial registration: This is a qualitative study. The study participants are part of the cohort from Project Family Wellbeing (FamilieTrivsel). The project's trial registry number: NCT04129359. Registered October 16th 2019. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Being therapeutic when you aren't a therapist.
- Author
-
Ribaudo, Julie
- Subjects
EDUCATION of parents ,PATIENTS' families ,EMPATHY ,MEDICAL personnel ,MENTAL health ,MATERNAL health services ,MENTAL health services ,PARENT-child relationships ,NEED (Psychology) ,THERAPEUTIC alliance ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,CHILDREN - Abstract
This article explores the 'ways of being' (Pawl, 1994) that promote an alliance between the parent and provider and illuminates the concept of 'parallel process', otherwise known in Infant Mental Health (IMH) work as the platinum rule, 'Do unto others as you would have others do unto others' (Pawl, 1994:23). Parallel process illuminates the interconnected nature of providing for a parent what we hope parents can provide for their infant (Weatherston & Ribaudo, 2020). Often, parents who struggle the most to provide for their infant's emotional and relational needs have not had reliable experiences of their own needs being met. By offering emotional containment and care, practitioners across a spectrum of perinatal services can be a source of healing and, thus, therapeutic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
42. Prioritising infant mental health: a qualitative study examining the role of education and training to infant mental health service development in Scotland
- Author
-
Murphy, Fionnghuala, Phang, Fifi, Weaver, Alicia, Minnis, Helen, McFadyen, Anne, and Dawson, Andrew
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Self Worth From Birth project.
- Author
-
Ball, Robyn and Bire, Lucy
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse ,MENTAL health ,CONVERSATION ,NEURAL development ,GASTROSCHISIS ,PARENT-child relationships ,ANXIETY ,SELF-compassion ,ELECTRONIC books ,CHILD development ,MENTAL depression ,CHILD behavior - Abstract
Lucy and Robyn have created an e-book called 'Baby Brain Growth', which Robyn presented last July at the World Association for Infant Mental Health (WAIMH) conference in Dublin. The book is dedicated to the memory of Kyle Taylor, Robyn's daughter Erin's partner, who was born with the condition gastroschisis and passed away in January 2023. Kyle fulfilled his life purpose to have a family of his own. His daughter, Sophie Helena, was born in August, 2022. Due to Kyle's health, he wasn't able to work, so in the early months, Kyle was either sitting on the couch watching over Sophie as she slept beside him, or standing close with Erin gazing at her. These few months are a priceless gift that Kyle gave to Sophie. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
44. Inspiring respect for fathers as coparents through a trauma-informed, infant-family mental health transformation of community-based services: process and early implementation with a multi-agency community collaborative.
- Author
-
McHale, James, Burton, Donna, Negrini, Lisa, Jacob, Alexandra Albizu, and Butler, LaDonna
- Subjects
PREPAREDNESS ,FATHERS ,MENTAL health ,CORPORATE culture ,CHILD welfare ,SUBSTANCE abuse - Abstract
Introduction: Despite compelling evidence that high-quality early care has an enduring impact, there has been little coordinated effort to transform services delivery to infuse Trauma-Informed Family Centered (TI-FC) principles into community-based agencies serving children and their families. A need for more culturally attuned, family-sensitive, evidence-based, and trauma-informed supports, especially for vulnerable children, their families and fathers, is apparent in evidence amassed by key stakeholders within the geographic area of this study. This report details the planning process, TI-FC training series, and organizational profile assessments. Authors conclude with recommendations regarding the establishment of multi-agency collectives, to include fathers, toward betterment of infant-family mental health at the community level. Methods: The current case study details the community-level transformational effort in which major health, mental health, substance abuse, and child welfare organizations serving families of children age 0-3 worked collaboratively to enhance TI-FC services. We describe a four-stage process (1 - planning, 2 - assessment of organizational readiness, 3 - surveys, document reviews and focus groups, 4 - delivery of a training series) detailing the work of the collaborative, guided by key agency decision-makers. Results: The study found significant initial success in adapting approaches to serving children 0-3 and their families through TI-FC perspectives. By proactively engaging several lead organizations in a deliberative planning process with universal aims and transformational principles, the collaborative team was able to coordinate organizational assessment, staff training and consultation, self-monitoring of organizational shifts, and problem-solving of obstacles and solutions to TI-FC services delivery. Discussion: All agencies succeeded in completing comprehensive, multi-faceted analyses of organizational culture, preparing personnel for TI-FC services through comprehensive training, and utilizing this collaborative to make deliberate and customized changes within their programs, as concerns both support of families and father engagement. Preliminary data indicate that important shifts took hold and signified changes across key domains of TI-FC care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Initiating the dialogue between infant mental health and family therapy: a qualitative inquiry and recommendations.
- Author
-
Opie, Jessica E., Booth, Anna T., Rossen, Larissa, Fivaz‐Depeursinge, Elisabeth, Duschinsky, Robbie, Newman, Louise, McIntosh, Jennifer E., Hartley, Eliza, Painter, Felicity, Oppenheim, David, Paul, Campbell, Corboz‐Warnery, Antoinette, Carr, Alan, Philipp, Diane A., and McHale, James P.
- Subjects
- *
FAMILY psychotherapy , *MENTAL health , *PARENT-infant relationships , *QUALITATIVE research , *EARLY intervention (Education) , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *THEMATIC analysis , *PARENT-child relationships , *JUDGMENT sampling , *STATISTICAL sampling , *PSYCHOTHERAPY - Abstract
This qualitative study explores infant‐family mental health experts' perspectives and experiences regarding the inclusion of infants in the family therapy setting. Infant socioemotional development is relational in nature and evolves in the context of both dyadic attachment relationships and broader multi‐person co‐parenting systems. Given this, we sought to understand why family therapy interventions involving families with infants rarely include the infant in a triangular or family systemic approach. Interviews were completed by clinical and/or research experts whose work integrates tenets of both infant mental health (IMH) and family theory and therapy. All interviewees brought at least 5 years of expertise and were actively engaged in the field. Interviewees expressed consistent beliefs that infants have a rightful and helpful place in family therapy approaches. They maintained that infants' innate social drive and communicative capacities position them to make meaningful and clinically significant contributions within family and systemic psychotherapy contexts. Noting that infants have remained on the periphery of these practices, experts advocated expansion and greater integration between IMH and family therapy, while preserving each field's distinctive identity. Experts reported that the interplay between IMH and family therapy fields has been uni‐directional as family systems concepts are embedded within IMH approaches, but few IMH premises are incorporated in mainstream family therapy practices. The disconnect was attributed to multiple factors, including graduate and professional training and theoretical, clinical, research, and sociocultural barriers, which were mutually reinforcing. Experts also identified clinical gains for both infants and family members when infants were meaningfully included in family interventions. Common ground was identified between the disciplines, with a belief that relationally distressed young children and parents are best served by clinical engagement with their network of relationships. Results call for greater collaboration between disciplines to challenge existing traditions and to more fully include infants in mainstream family therapy. Recommendations for integration of family therapy and IMH in clinical, theoretical, research, training, and sociocultural domains are offered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Including the infant in family therapy and systemic practice: charting a new frontier.
- Author
-
Opie, Jessica E., McHale, James P., Fonagy, Peter, Lieberman, Alicia, Duschinsky, Robbie, Keren, Miri, and Paul, Campbell
- Subjects
- *
FAMILY psychotherapy , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *WELL-being , *INFANT care , *INFANT development , *ETHICS , *SOCIAL support , *PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability , *MENTAL health , *FAMILY roles , *MEDICAL protocols , *FAMILY relations , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *CHILDREN - Abstract
This position paper from a core group of infant mental health academics and clinicians addresses the conspicuous underrepresentation of the infant in mainstream family therapy. Despite infants' social capacities and clear contributions to family dynamics, they remain largely overlooked within this therapeutic context. We suggest that family therapists have moral and professional responsibilities to support the participation, protection, and well‐being of all family members, including the infant. Here, we emphasise the importance of including the infant in the family therapy setting. By highlighting their frequent omission, we aim to amplify infants' often unheard 'voice,' role, and contributions to family development, especially recovery from distress. A shift towards infant inclusion as the rule rather than the exception represents a new frontier of integration. We first highlight the relational nature of infant development with a focus on the infants' psychosocial capacities and vulnerabilities. We then consider reasons why the infant may be overlooked in family and systemic therapies and offer a rationale for inviting the infant into these settings, illustrated through the use of a clinical case vignette. To facilitate infant inclusion, we propose a series of guidelines to meaningfully incorporate infants into family therapy practices. We conclude by encouraging shifts in family therapy research, training, and practice to better incorporate and understand the unique contributions of the infant to family life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. 'How I wonder what you are?': what infant observation offers family therapy.
- Author
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Bunston, Wendy and Jones, Sarah J.
- Subjects
- *
FAMILY psychotherapy , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *INFANT development , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *PROFESSIONAL employee training , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Training in infant observation, highly valuable in the infant mental health (IMH) field, has an enormous amount to offer family therapists. These two fields of practice, both hold working with the relational world of their clients as central. As two senior family therapists who are also IMH practitioners, we invite those reading this paper to explore the possibilities inherent in undertaking infant observation training as a pathway to enriching and expanding their practice. We provide an overview of infant observation training, how this approach was conceived, and explore the benefits of honouring the subjectivity of the infant, that of bringing the infant's experience alive in the therapeutic space. We provide direct examples from our own practice. We conclude with how infant observation might be incorporated into family therapy training and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. In conversation: transgenerational attachment trauma, the infant, and the family therapist.
- Author
-
McIntosh, Jennifer, Newman, Louise, and George, Carol
- Subjects
- *
WOUND care , *FAMILY psychotherapy , *MARRIAGE & family therapists , *INTERGENERATIONAL relations , *WORK , *CONVALESCENCE , *COLLEGE teachers , *MENTAL health , *MEDICAL care , *MOTHER-infant relationship , *ATTACHMENT behavior , *HUMANITY , *THEORY , *EMOTIONS , *CONCEPTS - Abstract
This paper shares a far‐ranging set of conversations between professors Jennifer McIntosh, Louise Newman, and Carol George, all child and family practitioners, and infant mental health (IMH) and attachment specialists. They explore the domain of infant–family work with high‐risk populations experiencing complex relational and intergenerational trauma. George and McIntosh discuss the intersection between family therapy and IMH from an attachment perspective. They explore what family therapy can offer to supporting coherence in caregiving states of mind, beyond the offerings of traditional dyadic mother–baby models of intervention. They highlight the infant's contribution to family work, and the application of attachment theory in a family therapy context. Newman and McIntosh discuss a sensitive and graded approach to high‐risk family work with an infant. Newman reflects on when and whom to invite to a family session and the power of enabling the family to speak the unspeakable in the presence of the baby, supporting a future focused path for trauma integration and recovery. For family therapists who may be new to IMH work, there are some important offerings about integrating these fields, bringing into play the family therapist's deep grasp of curiosity, circularity, and capacity to reconceptualise with an IMH perspective on early relational trauma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Preterm infant mental health in the neonatal intensive care unit: A review of research on NICU parent‐infant interactions and maternal sensitivity.
- Author
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Hartzell, Georgina, Shaw, Richard J., and Givrad, Soudabeh
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PREMATURE infants , *NEONATAL intensive care units , *LITERATURE reviews , *INTENSIVE care units , *MENTAL health , *INFANT health , *NEONATOLOGY , *PARENT-infant relationships - Abstract
Caregiving relationships in the postnatal period are critical to an infant's development. Preterm infants and their parents face unique challenges in this regard, with infants experiencing separation from parents, uncomfortable procedures, and increased biologic vulnerability, and parents facing difficulties assuming caregiver roles and increased risk for psychological distress. To better understand the NICU parent‐infant relationship, we conducted a review of the literature and identified 52 studies comparing observed maternal, infant, and dyadic interaction behavior in preterm dyads with full‐term dyads. Eighteen of 40 studies on maternal behavior found less favorable behavior, including decreased sensitivity and more intrusiveness in mothers of preterm infants, seven studies found the opposite, four studies found mixed results, and 11 studies found no differences. Seventeen of 25 studies on infant behavior found less responsiveness in preterm infants, two studies found the opposite, and the remainder found no difference. Eighteen out of 14 studies on dyad‐specific behavior reported less synchrony in preterm dyads and the remainder found no differences. We identify confounding factors that may explain variations in results, present an approach to interpret existing data by framing differences in maternal behavior as potentially adaptive in the context of prematurity, and suggest future areas for exploration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Longitudinal Associations Between Parental Reflective Functioning and Maternal Mind-Mindedness.
- Author
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Brophy-Herb, Holly E., Lawler, Jamie M., Stacks, Ann M., Freeman, Sarah E., Pitzen, Jerrica, Riggs, Jessica, Dalimonte-Merckling, Danielle, Wong, Kristyn, Ribaudo, Julie, Huth-Bocks, Alissa, Muzik, Maria, and Rosenblum, Katherine L.
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INFANT health , *INFANTS , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Little work has examined longitudinal associations between parental reflective functioning (PRF) and mind-mindedness (MM), limiting the understanding of separate or bidirectional trajectories of these related but distinct forms of mentalization. We examined cross-lagged associations between PRF, assessed via interview, and MM, coded from play interactions, over 12 months among 90 parents (86% female; 57% White, 43% Black) of infants (Mage = 10.56 months, SD = 8.20) who were participating in The Michigan Model of Infant Mental Health Home Visiting. Data were collected at study enrollment Time 1 (T1) and at 6-month Time 2 (T2) and 12-month Time 3 (T3) postenrollment. Mind-minded comments were coded as appropriate, reflecting accurate interpretation of mental states or nonattuned, characterizing inaccurate interpretations. PRF and appropriate MM each remained stable over time. PRF at the T1 positively predicted appropriate MM at T2. No other cross-lagged associations between PRF and appropriate MM were significant. Concurrent correlations between appropriate MM and PRF were significant only at T3. Nonattuned MM showed stability from T1 to T2 but nonattuned MM at the T2 did not predict nonattuned MM at T3. Greater PRF at T1 predicted less nonattuned MM at T2. No other cross-lagged associations between PRF and nonattuned MM were significant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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