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Infants and Toddlers Need Strong Parents [clasp.org]

 

Parents play the most active and significant role in their baby’s healthy development. Young children learn and grow in strong families where parents are able to successfully face the challenge of nurturing their children. During the first three years of life, experiences are shaping a child’s brain and providing the foundation for later development. Parenting support services, which range from informational resources to more intensive interventions, can help improve parenting skills, strengthen parent-child relationships, promote children’s health and development, and reduce the likelihood of problems later. Negative experiences, such as maltreatment (abuse or neglect), can interfere with healthy development. Good child welfare policies can ensure that infants and toddlers have stable, nurturing relationships both by providing preventive services to help avoid maltreatment and by offering proper intervention and supports should maltreatment occur.

As part of the Building Strong Foundations: Advancing Comprehensive Policies for Infants, Toddlers, and Familiesproject, the Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP) and ZERO TO THREE identified 13 policies core to advancing infant-toddler wellbeing in four essential areas: healthy bodies, healthy minds, and healthy parents; economically stable families; strong parents; and high-quality child care and early education opportunities. These policies have a strong evidence base and, when implemented effectively and funded adequately, have the potential for long-term benefits to children and families. Today, ZERO TO THREE and CLASP are releasing two policy rationales making the case for strong parents:

Parents of infants and toddlers should have access to a full continuum of evidence-based parent support services that are appropriate to their needs. This includes a range of services, such as: information resources, evidence-based home visiting, parent education and peer support programs, and guidance in navigating other community services. Despite a patchwork of public funding, such as Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting Program (MIECHV) and Community-Based Child Abuse Prevention (CBCAP), existing parenting services are not widely available to those who need them. 

[For more on this story, go to http://www.clasp.org/blog/infa...-need-strong-parents]

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