Improving
Outcomes for Children Exposed to Violence: Safe Start Promising Approaches, OJJDP - Sponsored, 2017 PDF
There is also evidence to suggest that there may be different developmental
outcomes for children exposed briefly to a mother with poor mental health compared with those exposed over a prolonged period.
Infection in pregnant women can lead to birth defects in developing fetuses and newborns, but long - term
outcomes for children exposed to the virus in the womb are largely unknown.
«New study holds hope for improving
outcomes for children exposed to methamphetamine: Supportive home environment may reduce behavioral, emotional issues.»
Not exact matches
Promotes permanency
for substance -
exposed newborns in the
child welfare system by working closely with their parents and the social service agencies, such as
child welfare agencies, courts, and substance abuse treatment providers that are major influences in placement
outcomes.
Evidence - Based Practices
for Children Exposed to Violence: A Selection From Federal Databases (PDF - 335 KB) U.S. Department of Justice & U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (2011) Summarizes Federal reviews of research studies and program evaluations to help localities address childhood exposure to violence and improve outcomes for children, families, and comm
Children Exposed to Violence: A Selection From Federal Databases (PDF - 335 KB) U.S. Department of Justice & U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (2011) Summarizes Federal reviews of research studies and program evaluations to help localities address childhood exposure to violence and improve
outcomes for children, families, and comm
children, families, and communities.
A Care Coordination Program
for Substance -
Exposed Newborns Twomey, Caldwell, Soave, Andreozzi Fontaine, & Lester (2011) Child Welfare, 90 (5) View Abstract Promotes permanency for substance - exposed newborns in the child welfare system by working closely with their parents and the social service agencies, such as child welfare agencies, courts, and substance abuse treatment providers that are major influences in placement ou
Exposed Newborns Twomey, Caldwell, Soave, Andreozzi Fontaine, & Lester (2011)
Child Welfare, 90 (5) View Abstract Promotes permanency for substance - exposed newborns in the child welfare system by working closely with their parents and the social service agencies, such as child welfare agencies, courts, and substance abuse treatment providers that are major influences in placement outc
Child Welfare, 90 (5) View Abstract Promotes permanency
for substance -
exposed newborns in the child welfare system by working closely with their parents and the social service agencies, such as child welfare agencies, courts, and substance abuse treatment providers that are major influences in placement ou
exposed newborns in the
child welfare system by working closely with their parents and the social service agencies, such as child welfare agencies, courts, and substance abuse treatment providers that are major influences in placement outc
child welfare system by working closely with their parents and the social service agencies, such as
child welfare agencies, courts, and substance abuse treatment providers that are major influences in placement outc
child welfare agencies, courts, and substance abuse treatment providers that are major influences in placement
outcomes.
Protective factors are related to good
outcomes for children, and serve to protect
children when they are
exposed to risk.
Although the existing research suggests diverse
outcomes, scholars have documented that young
children exposed to trauma (
for example, maltreatment and other forms of violence) are more likely than
children who have not been
exposed to trauma to experience physiologic changes at the neurotransmitter and hormonal levels (and perhaps even at the level of brain structure) that render them susceptible to heightened arousal and an incapacity to adapt emotions to an appropriate level.21 This emotional state increases their sensitivity to subsequent experiences of trauma and impairs their capacity to focus, remember, learn, and engage in self - control.22
There were significant associations between brief exposure to maternal mental ill - health, but the
outcomes for these
children were less marked than
for those repeatedly
exposed to a mother with mental health problems.
There was a clear effect of the duration of exposure to poor mental health
for all of the
child outcomes: those
children exposed to repeated poor maternal mental health had poorer
outcomes than those
exposed «briefly» who, in turn, had poorer
outcomes than those whose mothers were defined as having good or average mental health throughout.
Previous research has found that exposure to poor maternal mental health in the early years can have a range of impacts on
child behavioural, emotional, social and cognitive
outcomes, and that there may be differences in
outcomes for those
exposed to brief or long - standing maternal mental ill health.
Summary: (To include comparison groups,
outcomes, measures, notable limitations) This study examined the efficacy and feasibility of Preschool PTSD Treatment (PPT)
for treating posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in
children 3 - 6 years of age
exposed to heterogeneous types of traumas.
Longitudinal treatment effectiveness
outcomes of a group intervention
for women and
children exposed to domestic violence.
Discussion LBW / PT
children with a difficult temperament are more at risk
for poor developmental
outcomes, such as externalizing behavior problems, when
exposed to family conflict than
children with a less difficult temperament.