Friday, May 31, 2013

Relevant Research

May has been a busy month in the world of early childhood research. We've created a short list of some newly released resources!

- Dr. Dworkin, Director of the Help Me Grow National Center, has updated his blog again. This time it's filled with links to interesting brain research as presented by Jack Shonkoff and others regarding the impact of early adversity on young children and the importance of strong communities! Visit his post and explore the latest in baby brain science.

- Charles Bruner, executive director of the Child and Family Policy Center, has shared a brief summary that covers the existing and potential opportunities for financing from Medicaid for Help Me Grow. In the summary, he illuminates opportunities for expansion and sustainability for Help Me Grow affiliates around the nation. See the description here or download the summary (pdf) directly here.

- The Urban Institute's latest report, Disconnected Mothers and the Well-Being of Children (pdf), synthesizes research related to low-income mothers disconnected from both work and welfare. The research shows that many of the circumstances disconnected mothers face pose major risks to children's development. As shared by Zero to Three, this paper provides potential interventions to help disconnected families, including increasing and stabilizing family income, enhancing parenting skills, supporting children directly, and reaching out to disconnected mothers who are not citizens.

- We hope you'll participate in the Early Learning Day of Action on June 5th. The day is a call to action to emphasize the importance of early learning from birth to five. You could plan and participate in a community rally, or simply send out a tweet. Every action, great or small, is a step in the right direction of bringing attention to the needs of young children! Learn more and get ideas from this online toolkit.


Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Alabama Chapter - AAP

Linda Lee has served since 2007 as Executive Director of the Alabama Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), where she oversees administration of the 700-member state society of pediatricians. During her tenure, she has grown the Chapter’s capacity to meet pediatric goals in numerous child health priority areas. As part of her role, Linda serves on numerous task forces, coalitions and committees including the Help Me Grow Alabama leadership team. We asked Linda to share a little with us about the work she has done and how AAP’s goals overlap with Help Me Grow.
Linda Lee, Executive Director
Alabama Chapter - American Academy of Pediatrics
Since 2007, in conjunction with Alabama’s Blueprint for Zero to Five initiative, the Chapter has co-led efforts to increase the percentage of children who receive standardized developmental screening in the medical home. We started this with the Alabama Assuring Better Child Health and Development (ABCD) project, which developed pilots in pediatric practices to train pediatricians on how to implement and score the Ages and Stages Questionnaire and refer for appropriate follow-up. In partnership with Alabama Medicaid Agency and ALL Kids, one of our goals was to establish state policy for third-party payment for standardized screening in the medical home. These efforts paid off, as Medicaid, ALL Kids, and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama have all developed policy around and now pay pediatricians and family physicians for developmental screening (limited). 

Since the ABCD pilots, AAP’s strong alliance with partners at Alabama Department of Public Health, Alabama Partnership for Children, and Alabama Department of Mental Health has happily evolved to the Help Me Grow model, a natural step for this work. We have been pleased to join forces with the United Way of Central Alabama/Success By 6 in expanding standardized screening further in a five-county area in Central Alabama. HMG & AAP trains pediatricians on use of the Ages and Stages Questionnaire, coupled with the important benefit of having a connection to community resources via the HMG call center. We are excited about this partnership and the work that UWCA has done to make this a reality. In addition, this initiative has married AAP’s early literacy program, Reach Out and Read-Alabama, with HMG by connecting practices in the five-county area with new books for children from six months to five years of age. We owe a lot to the Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham for its support of HMG-Central Alabama.

Linda can be reached at 334-954-2543 or llee@alaap.org.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

National Children's Mental Health Awareness Day


The U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) is the nation's leader for children's mental health services. SAMHSA's "Caring for Every Child's Mental Health" public awareness effort was created in 1994 with the mission to increase awareness around children's mental health. Every year there is a renewed public awareness effort and theme.

This year SAMHSA focuses on the importance of social connectedness—a sense of community—in enhancing resilience in young adults with mental health and substance use challenges at home, school, work, and in accessing health care services.

Watch this year's video here

Follow these links for more SAMHSA resources:
2013 - Social Connectedness Virtual Event
2012 - Juvenile Justice and Child Welfare Report
2011 - Child Resilience PSA
2010 - School Readiness PSA
2009 - Mental Health as a Priority PSA