Early Intervention In Childhood Setting
Clare MessengerImplementation Advisor, The Early
Intervention Foundation
What I will talk about
• The Early Intervention Foundation
• The importance of early intervention in early years
• Integrated systems for early years
WHO WE ARE…
EIF launched on 4th July 2013 as a charity and a What Works CentreWe promote Early Intervention to:
• Tackle the root causes of social problems
• Improve children’s life-chances, breaking the often intergenerational cycle of disadvantage
• Reduce the cost of failure to the taxpayer
WHAT WE DO….
WHAT IS EARLY INTERVENTION
• Early Intervention is about getting additional, timely and effective support to children who need it – enabling children to flourish and preventing costly, long-term and damaging outcomes
• Programmes, Practices and Systems to prevent social cost and personal harm for children and young people, from conception to early adulthood.
• Early Years AND “Early” activity
£70,000 – the cost of each child with untreated behavioural problems, 10 times the cost of children without behavioural problems
£59,000 - the average annual cost for a young person to be placed in a young offenders institution
£10m a day - the productivity loss to the state as a result of youth unemployment
£2.9bn – the current total cost of children in care, half of which is spent with dealing with children who have been abused
Source: Early Intervention: The Next Steps, report by Graham Allen MP, January 2011
WHY IS EARLY INTERVENTION IMPORTANT
Early Brain Development
• Compelling evidence• Emotional brain largely created in the first 18 months• At birth: 10 trillion synapses - 200 trillion by age 3 (implies rapid learning
via early life experience) • Experience – hard wiring • Embryo is affected by what the mother experiences eg DV • Child’s development is affected by the responsiveness of their mother• Parenting• Attachment and attunement
Why intervene at a young age?
– A child’s development score at just 22 months can serve as an accurate predictor of education outcomes at 26 years
– Vocabulary at age 5 has been found to be the best predictor of whether children who experienced social deprivation in childhood were able to escape poverty in later adult life.
– A study of boys assessed by nurses at age 3 as being ‘at risk’ found that they had two and a half times as many criminal convictions as the group deemed not to be at risk at age 21.
– Some 54% of the incidence of depression in women and 58% of suicide attempts by women have been attributed to adverse childhood experiences, according to a US study
Poor communication skills impact on...
Educational achievement Behaviour/vulnerability
Mental health
Employability
Criminality Disadvantage Cycle
•Vocabulary at 5 a powerful predictor of GCSE achievement
2/3 of 7-14 year olds with serious behaviour problems have language impairment
40% of 7 to 14 year olds referred to child psychiatric services had a language impairment that had never been suspected
47% of employers say they can’t get recruits with the communication skills they need
65% of young people in young offender institutions have communication difficulties
Children from low income families lag behind high income counterparts by sixteen months in vocabulary at school entry
What Helps?
• From birth, children’s learning results from their interaction with people around them, significantly affecting their later educational outcomes (Roulstone, 2011)• Good quality early relationships and secure attachment enable a
growing brain to become efficient, enhancing cognitive abilities (National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, 2011)• The developing brain of the baby adapts itself to the quality of the
relationship with parents, creating neural circuits that mirror his or her experiences (Belsky et al., 2011)
THE STILL FACE EXPERIMENT
What can we do?
• Universal preventive services• Targeted EI for those families that need it, understand risk factors and
route causes• Evidence based programmes• Think EI! , improving social and emotional development and
communication skills• Antenatal• Universal health services, health visiting programme• Children centres• Early years practitioners• Integrated approach
Family Nurse Partnership
US evaluations have found:•48% reduction in verified cases of child abuse and neglect by the time the children were aged 15 •56% reduction in A&E attendances for injuries and ingestions during child’s second year of life •28% relative reduction in all types of health care encounters during child’s first two years of life•79% relative reduction in the number of days that children were hospitalised with injuries or ingestions in child’s first two years of life
Incredible Years • to help their babies feel loved,
safe, and secure and encourage their babies’ physical and language development.
• The parenting group format fosters peer support networks and shared learning.
• Trained Incredible Years facilitators use video clips of real-life situational vignettes to support the training and stimulate parenting group discussions and practice exercises with their babies.
• Providing Incredible Years to the 150 or o 3-year-olds at risk of conduct disorder would cost roughly £780,000 per year
• Most of those 150 children at risk of a conduct disorder in their third year of life will be calling on child protection, special education, foster care and youth justice provisions.
• Equivalent cost of taking 20 children into foster care for 1 year.
• If Incredible Years ensures that 21 of the 150 children do not require foster care it pays for itself, before taking account of any other improved outcomes.
20 PIONEERING PLACES
Greater
Manchester
Newcastle
Nottingham
Poole
Plymouth
Solihull
Staffordshire
London Tri-
borough
Wiltshire &
Swindon
Worcestershire
Blackpool
Blackburn with
Darwen
Cheshire West &
Chester
Croydon
Dorset
Essex
Gateshead
Hertfordshire
Islington
Lancashire
SYSTEMS, PROGRAMMES & PRACTICE
Integrated Systems in Early Years• Commissioning• Governance• Strategic and operational targeting• Integrated assessments and delivery • Information sharing• Evidence based programmes • Best and promising practice for integrated structures • Single front door• Integrated MA teams • Single management structure / professional supervision
Early Intervention in Action