We also want to see reform to the Child Maintenance System to ensure children
of vulnerable parents are not losing out as a result of the way the system currently works.
She is recognised as having considerable skill in representing learning disabled or
otherwise vulnerable parents and parents with mental health difficulties.
We give 10 % of all our baby massage teacher training enrolments to
support vulnerable parents and babies around the world through our Nurture Foundation.
Young fathers (aged 16 - 24) are some of the most invisible, marginalised and
vulnerable parents in the UK.
The Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants (JCWI) said that the policy could
leave vulnerable parents and children at risk.
Voluntary home visiting programs have been proven to be powerful: They
offer vulnerable parents mentorship from a trained educator, from pregnancy into the first few years of a child's life, using the simple logic that parenting works.
Providing additional help
for vulnerable parents, including greater access to health visitor support and affordable childcare is high on the Scottish Government agenda (Scottish Government, 2016).
Building on its base and expertise in peer - to - peer approaches to strengthening families, the new mission is, «Be Strong Families promotes the empowered engagement
of vulnerable parents, youth, children, and extended family members in ways that nurture the spirit of the family and promote well - being, healing and peace across the globe.»
«Alongside the material and financial support we will deliver, it is important that parents get advice when they need it — and we'll recruit 500 new health visitors by 2018 to better - support Scotland's families and further extend the family nurse partnership, which supports some of our youngest and
most vulnerable parents.»
She is interested in the cultural context of parenting, cultural adaptation in immigrant and minority families, identity processes surrounding ethnicity, socio - emotional development and regulation, and research and clinical work that
support vulnerable parents and their families.
Some innovative schools and children's service agencies are reaching out to
vulnerable parents to build up their parenting skills and improve home relationships.
Nicholas Dobson considers what happened when a local authority fell short on its duties to cater for
a vulnerable parent & disabled child