Literature DB >> 28520276

Expanding early childhood mental health consultation to new venues: Serving infants and young children in domestic violence and homeless shelters.

Charles F Brinamen1, Adriana N Taranta1, Kadija Johnston1.   

Abstract

The number of infants and young children affected by homelessness and domestic violence is growing, and the effect of these experiences on children is wide-ranging. Early childhood mental health consultation (ECMHC) has expanded to these settings to help the adults attend to very young children whose needs are often obscured by families' crises. Recent research in ECMHC to childcare has cited the salience of the consultant-consultee relationship as the central contributor to positive change in caregiver's behavior and children's experience. This article explores the similarities and variations in the consultant's way of being that are necessary to expand this relationship-based ECMHC model to adult-focused settings. This has incorporated a combination of consultative shifts: expanded training, appreciation for families' survival priorities, attention to the effects of unavoidable adult decisions on children, increased tolerance for the affect this raises in parents and caseworkers, and greater efforts to create space for reflection and thinking. Caseworkers' attenuated contact with and limited prior knowledge about young children creates challenges in identifying and responding to concerns about children. The particular systemic and relational difficulties that emerge in shelters and that influence caseworkers' responsiveness to clients are explored.
Copyright © 2012 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.

Entities:  

Year:  2012        PMID: 28520276     DOI: 10.1002/imhj.21338

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infant Ment Health J        ISSN: 0163-9641


  4 in total

1.  Housing and Support Services with Homeless Mothers: Benefits to the Mother and Her Children.

Authors:  Xiamei Guo; Natasha Slesnick; Xin Feng
Journal:  Community Ment Health J       Date:  2015-02-14

2.  A Diagnosis of Denial: How Mental Health Classification Systems Have Struggled to Recognise Family Violence as a Serious Risk Factor in the Development of Mental Health Issues for Infants, Children, Adolescents and Adults.

Authors:  Wendy Bunston; Candice Franich-Ray; Sara Tatlow
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2017-10-17

3.  Reflective Capacity: An Antidote to Structural Racism Cultivated Through Mental Health Consultation.

Authors:  Miriam E Silverman; Margaret S Hutchison
Journal:  Infant Ment Health J       Date:  2019-07-10

Review 4.  The Experience of the Infant Entering Refuge (Shelter) Setting with Their Mothers After Fleeing Family Violence.

Authors:  Wendy Bunston; Margarita Frederico; Mary Whiteside
Journal:  J Fam Violence       Date:  2020-11-26
  4 in total

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