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Nordic children Early intervention for children and families
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1 Nordic children Early intervention for children and families Nordic Centre for Welfare and Social Issues Inspiration booklet Results of the 'Early intervention for families' project 1
2 Nordic children Early intervention for children and families Publisher: Nordic Centre for Welfare and Social Issues November 2012 Editors: Kristin Marklund and Nino Simic Principal authors: Kristin Marklund, project manager of 'Early intervention for families', Anna-Karin Andershed and Henrik Andershed, Örebro University. Other authors: Mirjam Kalland, Petra Kouvonen, Terje Ogden, Helene Hjort Oldrup, Knut Sundell, Nino Simic and Eivor Söderström. Editorial staff: Kristin Marklund, Petra Kouvonen, Nino Simic Legally responsible publisher: Ewa Persson Göransson Illustrations: Helena Halvarsson Graphic design: Printing: Ineko ISBN: No. of copies: Nordic Centre for Welfare and Social Issues Sweden Box 22028, Stockholm, Sweden Street address: Hantverkargatan 29 Phone: Nordic Centre for Welfare and Social Issues Denmark Slotsgade 8, DK-9330 Dronninglund, Denmark Phone: Nordic Centre for Welfare and Social Issues Finland Topeliusgatan 41 a A, FIN Helsinki, Finland Phone: (0) The report can be ordered as a printed copy or downloaded at: under the 'Publications' tab. In digital format, the booklet is also available in Danish, Finnish, Norwegian, Icelandic and English. Miljömärkt trycksak,
3 Introduction You hold in your hand part 1 of the report on the 'Early intervention for families' project. The project is part of the Nordic Council of Ministers' initiative in 2011 and 2012 in the field of 'Early preventive intervention for families at risk of social marginalisation'. As a consequence of this prioritisation, the Nordic Centre for Welfare and Social Issues was commissioned to carry out this project. The aim is to disseminate research results and knowledge about good examples, and create Nordic networks. The project has four focus areas: current research on risk and protection factors, promising examples of early intervention in the Nordic region, simplified access to services and let the children's voices be heard! Part 1 of the report, which you are reading now, presents the project results from the first two focus areas. 3
4 PART 1 EARLY INTERVENTION FOR FAMILIES AND CHILDREN IN THE NORDIC REGION... 6 Early intervention early in life... 7 Small children are more easily influenced... 7 Staff at preschools must react... 8 Systematic analysis in partnership with parents... 8 Early intervention as a continuous process... 9 Intervention adapted to the target group... 9 Universal, selective or indicated intervention? Preschool a place to identify vulnerable children Offer intervention that works! Train, guide and support parents Give children the opportunity to develop Parental support as early intervention PARENTAL SUPPORT IN THE NORDIC REGION A MODEL FOR EARLY INTERVENTION Why manual-based parental training programmes? Training in parental support programmes Choosing the right programme How can you keep up with research? What do you do when there is no research? CONTENTS 4 PROMISING INTERVENTIONS FOR PARENTS WITH VERY YOUNG CHILDREN Support for parents in the first few years What does the research say about intervention for children aged 0-3? The importance of early interaction and early attachment Examples of promising intervention for new parents School preparation programmes as early intervention Successfully implementing new methods More effective with national implementation Early intervention is worthwhile Implementation of PMTO in Iceland with limited resources Example: PMTO with Somali and Pakistani parents interview Concluding words... 35
5 PART 2 RISK AND PROTECTIVE FACTORS IN RELATION TO FUTURE PSYCHOSOCIAL PROBLEMS AMONG PRESCHOOL CHILDREN WHAT WE KNOW FROM RESEARCH AND HOW IT CAN BE APPLIED IN PRACTICAL WORK Focus on acting-out and internalised problems What are risk factors and protective factors? Risk and protective factors exist at many levels What are the risk and protective factors in preschool children? Can US research be applied to Nordic children? Behavioural problems, one of the strongest risk factors Many risk factors means higher risks Similarities between boys and girls in terms of risk and protective factors Inheritance and environmental aspects of risk and protective factors Applying knowledge of risk and protective factors in practice Risk-focused prevention and treatment work Not an exact science Three principles of risk-focused prevention and treatment work Structure important when assessing risk and protective factors Importance of education Which professions can undertake risk-focused prevention and treatment work? Assessment, intervention and follow-up Concluding words on risk and protective factors Promotion of dialogue with parents experience from Finland The challenge Parents are specialists in their own children Risk-focused work in practice example of Sjöbo Municipality in Sweden
6 PART 1 EARLY INTERVENTION FOR FAMILIES AND CHILDREN IN THE NORDIC REGION 6 Early intervention for families and children in the Nordic region Experts from the Nordic countries have been meeting for two years to prepare proposals for early intervention that works. Researchers and practicians have proposed good examples from their respective countries. One of the results of this has been Parental Support in the Nordic Region (Föräldrastöd Norden) a model for implementing parental support programmes. Instead of more programmes, we need fewer programmes that are effective and evaluated in the Nordic region. Many of the programmes used today are not supported by research. Some are probably effective but they lack both documentation and follow-up. There are programmes today that have good effects. Pan-Nordic research could be implemented with the focus on a few selected interventions. Successful implementation of methods is essential to successful results. National support for implementation has proved to be one way of improving success.
7 In addition to the model, examples are given of programmes that identify parents with newborn children and a school preparation programme from Denmark. An overview of research into risk and protective factors has also been carried out and is presented in the inspiration booklet. Knowledge is required to identify children and families in need of support and to prepare intervention that enhances the protective factors and reduces risk factors. Early intervention is worthwhile, not least from a socioeconomic point of view. Most parents in the Nordic region receive support from child welfare centres during pregnancy, and nearly all children attend preschool. In the Nordic countries, we therefore have a unique opportunity to identify the need for and offer support to children and families at an early stage. Early intervention early in life Children at risk of developing functional problems do not have time to wait. It is necessary for someone to identify the problems they have and what they are struggling with. For these children, early help means good help, and this may mean that it is possible to prevent the problems increasing and becoming more difficult to manage. The difficulties are usually associated with sleep, meals, hygiene or play. There may be learning and development difficulties in the background or biological immaturity that may be temporary. Examples include children with delayed language development, children with reduced functional ability and children who come from difficult family circumstances. All may need special training, follow-up and adaptation, socially, educationally or physically. In some areas, there may be progressive problems, i.e. new problems are added to the old ones as the children get older. Children with language problems may, for example, have problems learning to read when they start school, which may, in turn, lead to increased difficulties throughout their school career. Small children are more easily influenced To be able to intervene early for children in the risk zone, problems must be identified early. However, it is essential to identify and map the functional problem and then follow it up with intervention. The longer it takes before a child receives help, the more difficult it is to provide the right help. Although many very young children show clear signs that they have difficulties, many do not get help in time. Early help is good help and small children are, in many ways, more easily influenced and more receptive to help than older children. 7
8 PART 1 EARLY INTERVENTION FOR FAMILIES AND CHILDREN IN THE NORDIC REGION 8 Staff at preschools must react One obstacle to early intervention may be that those who work with very young children adopt a 'wait and see' attitude. As it is normal for there to be differences between children, they expect some children to grow out of their problems. This is also true for some children, for example those who mature later than their peers, or those who develop late for other reasons. When those who work with children, for example employees in preschools, are cautious about identifying children in the risk zone, the reason is often because they do not want children to be 'pigeonholed' and 'stigmatised'. Staff know that early diagnosis can sometimes have unintentional negative effects and therefore want to protect children from this. Diagnosis can also be unreliable, which means that some children are not diagnosed at all and receive no special treatment. Another problem of early identification is also that different informants make different assessments of children's functional levels and problems. There is often a surprising lack of concordance between parents' view of their child at home and the experience of staff at preschool. This makes it difficult to establish a child's development status. However, whatever the reason for assuming a wait and see attitude to early analysis and identification, it is unfortunate for the children who need early intervention. Therefore, it is important for everyone who works with children and families to be aware that there are children with special needs. At the same time, the analysis work must take into account the many elements of uncertainty that are associated with children's risk status, and caution should be shown when using diagnosis or other criteria to categorise children. A good aid may be to carry out a study in relation to risks and protective factors and an analysis to identify a child's strengths and weaknesses. The procedure for early identification of vulnerable children should be standardised and research-based rather than being based on subjective opinions. If the approach takes the child's development level into account, the analysis can be followed up with early intervention to correct, prevent or stimulate the child's development. Systematic analysis in partnership with parents Early identification should be based on observations and assessments of children in their daily environment and take a broad approach to their physical, cognitive, social and emotional functional level and difficulties. The work should be accurate so that the most time and expertise is devoted
9 to children who need it most. Therefore, it is necessary for the analysis and follow-up to be systematic. This can be implemented as a three-stage process in which the first stage consists of informal assessments of all children carried out by expert staff in a medical centre or preschool. The assessment criteria may be formulated as checklists and should be based on relevant research. Children who differ from their peers in important areas or who need to be studied for other reasons should be followed up in greater depth. Stage two can therefore consist of analysis and assessment of interaction, behaviour and skills with the aid of standardised analysis tools or observation routines. A more detailed study should be made of children who exceed critical thresholds. Stage three can therefore consist of tests and individual observation in structured and unstructured activities in which a more in-depth analysis of the child's behaviour and development is made. Throughout the process, it is important for the parents to be informed and for them to participate if the child needs further investigation. Early intervention as a continuous process However, it is important to note that early intervention does not function as a 'vaccine' that has unlimited effect. For some children, it may be important to maintain intervention measures over time if they are to work. As children get older, they may be exposed to risks in the form of new burdens and stress. Early intervention must therefore not be regarded as one-off intervention. It is a continuous process in which children are followed closely for periods of time and in situations in which they may be vulnerable, for example when they move from preschool to school. Intervention adapted to the target group Children may also be divided into risk or intervention groups. Most children belong to the low-risk children group, with good intellectual, motor, behavioural, social and emotional function. A small group of children are in the risk zone and may develop functional difficulties as they are exposed to risks of an individual and environmental nature. The last and smallest group are children who have already developed problems related to mental health, motor skills, behaviour and cognitive function. These children may need extensive, long-term help and stimulation and are presumably the group that benefit most from early intervention. It should be clear which children are in the target group when early intervention begins. 9
10 PART 1 EARLY INTERVENTION FOR FAMILIES AND CHILDREN IN THE NORDIC REGION 10 Universal, selective or indicated intervention? Universal intervention is generally preventive and is targeted at all children. Selective intervention is targeted at children who are assessed as being in the risk zone. Indicated intervention is targeted at children who are particularly vulnerable or have already developed functional problems. Risk factors in a child's development have a tendency to form a coherent pattern that affects sensitive children when they are exposed to negative social and psychological influences. It is not always possible to anticipate the problems to which the pattern will lead, and the same risk factors may lead to different forms of problem development. As a consequence, early intervention should have a broad focus that prevents problems and develops resources and expertise. Preschool a place to identify vulnerable children Compared with children of school age, fewer Nordic preschool children receive special educational help or psychiatric treatment or are reported to the social service authorities. This may be a sign that preschools are used too little as a place for identifying vulnerable children and that intervention only takes place when they start school. There are studies that show that preschool has less influence on children than parents and the home, for which reason it is important for parents to participate in early intervention. It is often an advantage for early intervention to have a 'low threshold' so that the parents themselves can make contact and ask for an assessment of their child's problems and for this opportunity to be available where the child is, i.e. at preschool or in a medical centre. Preschools have a unique opportunity to take preventive action, identify needs and implement intervention for children who need extra care and help in the development and learning of skills. By limiting the use of diagnosis and categorisation of children according to the type and degree of the functional problems, it is also possible to prevent early intervention having stigmatising effects on children and their environments. Offer intervention that works! There is increased understanding that early intervention should consist of intervention or measures that have been shown by research to work for defined problems and in specific situations. In other words, it is important to make
11 use of the best knowledge of what works and let research guide practice. There are models, programmes, measures and methods that have produced good results via controlled evaluation. Intervention should be clearly described via guidelines or manuals and implemented in accordance with theoretical and practical preconditions. The evaluation should cover the benefit to children and their families of the intervention, as well as the implementation of the intervention. If a measure does not produce positive results, it may be because the intervention was not as effective as expected or its implementation was deficient. Train, guide and support parents Early intervention for children who have not started school often aims to improve the children's physical health or promote their cognitive, social and emotional development. However, intervention may also be started earlier with followup of mothers during pregnancy and childbirth. An overview of international knowledge shows that most preventive intervention targeted at children of preschool age aims to stimulate children's cognitive development or otherwise enhance their ability to cope with school. Some intervention has also been shown to have a long-term positive impact on children's function. Training, guidance and support for parents are also a common denominator of successful projects and measures and they often focus on promoting expertise, initiative and independence among both parents and children. Give children the opportunity to develop Not all children can achieve as much in terms of functional capacity, and inherited conditions may limit learning ability and development potential. In spite of this, it is important to make full use of environment-related intervention, regardless of children's conditions, to stimulate and support children in their learning and development. The aim of early intervention is to reduce the risk of children developing behavioural problems, mental or physical health problems or problems with school. The intervention may involve identifying and stimulating children's resources and talents, and also promoting their ability to handle stress, setbacks and crises. It may involve creating a childhood environment in which children have a feeling of belonging and in which they learn important skills so that they can make a contribution and be appreciated for their contribution. 11
12 PART 1 EARLY INTERVENTION FOR FAMILIES AND CHILDREN IN THE NORDIC REGION 12 Read more at: Parental support as early intervention One result of the Nordic project is a proposal for Nordic implementation of parental support. The idea is to focus on just a few parental support programmes and implement them in all municipalities. This would mean that pan-nordic research could be carried out and it would result in greater cost efficiency, in particular in respect of training and implementation costs. The introduction of national implementation support seems to be an efficient model. The implementation of TIBIR in Norway is a good example in the Nordic region. Parental support in the Nordic region is a proposal for a simplified model of TIBIR. It is important to adapt parental support programmes so that they are attractive to parents who are at risk of marginalisation. Later in the booklet, we show how parental support has been successfully implemented with Pakistani and Somali parents. TIBIR Early intervention for children at RISK The TIBIR programme was developed in Norway on the basis of experience from previous implementation work. The objective of TIBIR was to prevent and remedy behavioural problems in children aged 3-12 at an early stage and contribute to developing children's positive and prosocial behaviour. The programme therefore enhances intervention that is targeted at families with children who have already developed behavioural problems or who are at risk of doing so. The programme consists of six intervention modules that form an overall intervention strategy for families with children. TIBIR training is given to municipal staff who work in welfare services for children and families.
13 Parental support in the Nordic region a model for early intervention Parental support in the Nordic region involves support for families on three levels. The basic idea is that it must be easy to get support as a parent and that the support must be provided at an early stage. When the problems are severe, it must be easy to get help to obtain more extensive support. The intervention offered should have been evaluated and have demonstrated good results in the research. The implementation of Parental support in the Nordic region means that the range of intervention is limited and the intervention offered can be evaluated. Research takes time and constant replacement of intervention may mean that knowledge of what works is only presented after the intervention is no longer being used. There are benefits of thinking long-term and not replacing intervention before you know what works. Parental support in the Nordic region is a full-service package of early support for families with children in a municipality. Implementing Parental support in the Nordic region does not automatically mean increased costs for the municipality's preventive work. It may involve reprioritising the intervention that already exists. During an introductory period, costs may be incurred on training and guiding staff who will be group leaders. It is important for there to be a long-term plan for implementation of the model. Parental support should be evaluated and, if necessary, adapted to the needs of different target groups. The basis of the model is a shared knowledge base for staff who work with children. All professionals who work with children, for example in a preschool or family centre, should have knowledge of risk and protective factors. To spread this knowledge to all staff who work with children, educational initiatives can be carried out continuously. Read more about risk and protective factors on page 36. Three modules of parental support are offered to parents in all municipalities: 1. Universal support for all parents The tradition in the Nordic welfare model is for most services to be universal, i.e. they are offered to everyone and are not means-tested. This also applies to parental support, and maternity and child health care and preschools are offered to all families with small children. These universal services are a 13
14 PART 1 EARLY INTERVENTION FOR FAMILIES AND CHILDREN IN THE NORDIC REGION 14 unique arena for preventive work and make high-quality parental support possible. There are also a number of parental support programmes today as well. The programmes cannot replace other welfare services but they can be an important supplement in the development of the support offered to families. In this project, we propose that the municipalities supplement their welfare services with one of the proposed programmes. As a universal initiative, it is proposed that parents in all municipalities be offered consultations as short-term intervention. This may involve a problem that has arisen with the child and may consist of a few discussions. Consultations are with staff who are trained in a parental support programme that is based on research, for example PMTO, the Parent Management Training Oregon model, The Incredible Years (De otroliga åren) or KOMET.
15 Read more at: The module may also involve universal parental training based on the same principles as the programme mentioned above. Parental training is provided for all interested parents and involves a few information evenings. In Sweden, for example, there is ABC, Alla Barn i Centrum (Focus on all children). 2. Parental support groups Module 2 involves Support for parents in groups. The target group is parents who experience problems with their children or parenting skills. For example, this may involve children who are often in conflict with other children, siblings and parents. Parents who seek support for help with strategies that improve their parenting skills. The parents seek out the help themselves or have been recommended the programme by child healthcare professionals, preschools, social services or other parents. The interventions in this group involve guiding parents in groups with other parents. The groups of parents usually meet once a week for hours on occasions. The groups are led by 1-2 leaders who are trained in the parental support programme. The teaching method is 'mini-lectures', group discussions, roleplay and exercises between meetings. The programmes proposed are PMTO (group intervention), The Incredible Years (De otroliga åren) (Basic) and KOMET. 3. Parental support individually Module 3 involves Individual support for parents who have children with significant behavioural problems. For an extended period of time, the relationship between parents and child has been characterised by constant conflict which has also been manifested between the child and schoolmates or between the child and staff at preschool/school. The family may have undergone parental support in a group but it has not been adequate intervention. The aim of the programme is for the parents and child to establish a positive relationship so that the child's positive development is promoted. Parents are trained in parenting skills and in how to encourage their child when he or she is learning new skills. Parents also receive training in regaining parental control and developing positive interaction with their child. The programme includes practical exercises and homework. The parents and therapist set up objectives and sub-objectives during the treatment and these are followed up. The parental support takes hours per session and the number of sessions is tailored to the family's needs. The individual support proposed is PMTO, The Incredible Years (De otroliga åren) (Advanced) or Enhanced KOMET. 15
16 PART 1 EARLY INTERVENTION FOR FAMILIES AND CHILDREN IN THE NORDIC REGION 16 Read more: Read more: Read more: KOMET KOMET was developed in public service activities at the Prevention Centre in Stockholm. This is an evidence-based parental training programme that is based on international research on the interaction between parents and children and on social learning theory. KOMET offers training for staff who have the opportunity to arrange parent groups for parents with children aged KOMET parental support is targeted at parents who find that they are often in conflict and arguing with their child and find it difficult to manage the situation well. KOMET is also available as Enhanced KOMET with individual support for parents (children aged 3-11) and KOMET for parents of teenagers in groups (children aged 12-18). PMTO, Parent Management Training Oregon PMTO is an evidence-based programme that provides individual support for parents with children aged 4-12 with severe behavioural problems. The programme enhances social skills and cooperation. The objective is to prevent and reduce behavioural problems in children. The programme is based on research and development work carried out at the Oregon Social Learning Center in the USA. Norway has been the only country in the world to implement a national PMTO initiative. The programme has been developed for Norwegian conditions by the Norwegian Center for Child Behavioral Development (Atferdssenteret). On the basis of the same principles as in PMTO, group intervention has been developed for parents who have children with behavioural problems or children at risk of developing a behavioural problem (aged 4-12); TIBIR parental group intervention. De Otroliga Åren (The Incredible Years) The Incredible Years is evidence-based parental training. The initiative was developed by the US psychologist and researcher Carolyn Webster-Stratton. The target group is parents of children aged 3-12 who have emotional problems or behavioural difficulties. The parental training, in which parents learn how to promote positive development in their children, is divided into two parts. The first part is based on play, praise and rewards, and the aim is to enhance the relationship between children and parents. The second part develops strategies for the parents so that their children's behavioural problems can be reduced. The Incredible Years is available as group intervention at Basic and Advanced levels.
17 If a municipality chooses to apply this intervention, the same person can work at different levels but on the basis of the same theory. For example, group leaders for parental support groups can be the same people who provide universal training for parents at a family centre. Why manual-based parental training programmes? To prevent behavioural problems in children, there are a number of manual-based parental training programmes available today. Extensive international research and studies from the Nordic countries have shown good results from parental support programmes, including those concerning behavioural problems in children. A common starting point for these programmes is that it is possible, via education and training, to change parents' behaviour in relation to their children. The objective of parental support is to break a negative interaction pattern between parents and children. For parents who have children with behavioural problems, it has been shown that support discussions alone are not sufficient. If you add strategies for upbringing, training, roleplay and feedback (on training tasks), the potential for parents to develop their parenting skills increases. Training in parental support programmes Training of leaders for parental support programmes often starts at the same time as the group leader holds a parental support group. Top-up training is compulsory and all material that is used at the sessions is collected in manuals. The manual may, for example, consist of theory, exercises and film clips showing examples of situations groups can work with. A municipality can train group leaders who, in turn, train other group leaders. The training is relatively short but requires guidance and further training. For example, all training for KOMET group leaders takes place over 8 days, divided into two halves. Choosing the right programme A great deal of the advice and support intervention offered today lacks evaluation and, in many cases, any documentation. Intervention that is not effective may mean that problems increase and the parents may find that there is no point in seeking support again. When a family seeks support, it is important for the help to come fast and to be effective. 17
18 PART 1 EARLY INTERVENTION FOR FAMILIES AND CHILDREN IN THE NORDIC REGION 18 Read more at: commissioning-toolkit A municipality can choose a parental support programme that is already implemented on a large scale. However, it is important to choose programmes that are effective and have good research results. In Sweden, for example, many municipalities have chosen to implement KOMET. In Norway and Iceland, the focus has been on PMTO. In Denmark, the Incredible Years has been implemented in some municipalities. In Finland, parental support is seen as part of an excellent range of universal welfare services, including free maternity and child healthcare. The use of programme-based parental support is limited. The TIBIR implementation model in Norway may inspire countries that have no national strategy for implementation of programme-based parental support. How can you keep up with research? It may be difficult for a municipality or for professionals to keep up with research. Research needs to be translated to reach practice and result in practical action. Here are three examples from the Nordic countries in which intervention and research results are presented in the field of children and young people; Ungsinn in Norway, Vidensportalen in Denmark and Metodguiden in Sweden. What do you do when there is no research? There are a large number of initiatives to support the mental health of children and young people. In 2009, the National Board of Health and Welfare in Sweden identified 103 social services-based interventions in outpatient care to support children. Ten of these were evaluated in Sweden in such a way that it is possible to assess their effects. The situation is similar in preschool and primary and lower secondary school. Virtually none of the educational methods used for children's mental health have any scientific basis. Nor is it likely that all of these interventions will be evaluated in the foreseeable future. An intervention can be effective even if it is not evaluated. Therefore, methods other than evaluations of effects are required to assess whether a certain intervention is reasonably effective. One approach is to use criteria that research has systematically identified as important. This is the background for a British database on parental support intervention that is designed for professionals and parents. The interventions described in the database have been examined by a panel of
19 researchers with the focus on three central quality aspects, each of which is graded in five stages. Each of these three dimensions has been shown to predict whether interventions have positive effects for the target group. High points are given when there are: 1. A delimited target group There is a clear description of the target group's needs, a method for recruitment and ensuring that it is the right target group, a method for continuously measuring whether the target group's needs are being met and guidelines for whether and when others should be contacted to provide other support. 2. Theory rooted in research The theory for why the intervention will lead to change is based on research into risk and protective factors, there is research to support the fact that the intervention changes parents' interaction with their children and the short-term and long-term effects are theoretically realistic. 3. Well-defined training and implementation The requirements for prior knowledge for those who are to use the method are clarified and the training is structured with a clear format, scope and intensity. There is a written manual that explains what leads to change and what effects should be expected. There is also a method for examining whether the intervention is being used as intended. Supervision must be offered as support when you start to use the method and the supervisor's necessary qualifications are clear. As interventions that score high points on these criteria are more likely to work, the assessment may form the basis for activities to consider introducing a new intervention. The dimensions are no guarantee but they increase the likelihood of the intervention being effective. If the choice is between several different interventions, those that meet few or none of the above criteria should be avoided, for example those that claim to work for all types of problem, those with no theory about why they work, those with unclear scientific support and those with brief training (for example one-day training). 19
20 PART 1 EARLY INTERVENTION FOR FAMILIES AND CHILDREN IN THE NORDIC REGION 20 Promising interventions for parents with very young children Read more at: 'Intervention for vulnerable 0 3 yearolds and their parents' The interventions in Parental support in the Nordic region cover parents with children from the age of around 3. The following are examples of early support for parents with infants. Support for parents in the first few years Secure attachment between infants and parents is a protective factor that counteracts ill-health later in life. The likelihood of an infant developing a secure attachment to his or her parents increases if the interaction between the infant and the parents was satisfactory. This means that the parents are aware of the child's signals, interpret them correctly and react adequately to them. There is scientific support for this. Under this heading we have collected knowledge about support for parents during a child's first year of life. We know from research that not many evidence-based methods have been implemented in the Nordic countries in respect of small children. Major interventions already take place in maternity care and child healthcare and from family centres. However, there is no research from Nordic environments. A great deal of the interventions that produce good results in studies from the USA may have a different target group. The Nordic universal support for new parents may be more extensive than the US interventions. What does the research say about intervention for children aged 0-3? In 2011, the Danish research institute SFI, the Danish National Centre for Social Research, prepared a research overview on early intervention for vulnerable and at-risk children aged 0-3 and their parents (including pregnant mothers). The research overview covers interventions that aim to reduce or compensate for the following risk factors: maternal addiction, neglect, violence in close relationships, mental illness in the parents, early parenthood and combined problem profiles. The aim is to develop knowledge that can contribute to evidence-based practice in social policy. SFI has reviewed effect research that includes RCTs, quasi-experimental studies and studies with measurements before and after.
Nordic children Development of Nordic family centres. Results of the 'Early intervention for families' project
Nordic children Development of Nordic family centres Nordic Centre for Welfare and Social Issues The inspiration booklet Results of the 'Early intervention for families' project 1 Children in the Nordic