Early Childhood Education Institute, University of Oklahoma-Tulsa, Tulsa, OK, United States.
Department of Human Development and Family Studies, College of Social Science, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, United States.
Front Public Health. 2024 Feb 14;12:1297889. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1297889. eCollection 2024.
Given the importance of health to educational outcomes, and education to concurrent and future health, cross-systems approaches, such as the Whole School, Whole Community, Whole Child (WSCC) framework, seek to enhance services typically in K-12 settings. A major gap exists in cross-systems links with early care and education serving children birth to age 5. Both pediatric health systems and early family and child support programs, such as Early Head Start (EHS) and Head Start (HS), seek to promote and optimize the health and wellbeing of infants, toddlers, preschoolers, and their families. Despite shared goals, both EHS/HS and pediatric health providers often experience challenges in reaching and serving the children most in need, and in addressing existing disparities and inequities in services. This paper focuses on infant/toddler services because high-quality services in the earliest years yield large and lasting developmental impacts. Stronger partnerships among pedicatric health systems and EHS programs serving infants and toddlers could better facilitate the health and wellbeing of young children and enhance family strengths and resilience through increased, more intentional collaboration. Specific strategies recommended include strengthening training and professional development across service platforms to increase shared knowledge and terminology, increasing access to screening and services, strengthening infrastructure and shared information, enhancing integration of services, acknowledging and disrupting racism, and accessing available funding and resources. Recommendations, including research-based examples, are offered to prompt innovations best fitting community needs and resources.
鉴于健康对教育成果的重要性,以及教育对当前和未来健康的重要性,跨系统方法,如全学校、全社区、全儿童(WSCC)框架,旨在增强通常在 K-12 环境中提供的服务。在与从出生到 5 岁的儿童提供服务的早期护理和教育的跨系统联系方面存在重大差距。儿科保健系统和早期家庭和儿童支持计划,如早期开端(EHS)和开端计划(HS),都旨在促进和优化婴儿、幼儿、学龄前儿童及其家庭的健康和幸福。尽管目标相同,但 EHS/HS 和儿科保健提供者在接触和服务最需要的儿童方面,以及在解决服务方面现有的差距和不平等方面,常常面临挑战。本文重点介绍婴儿/幼儿服务,因为在最早的几年中提供高质量的服务会产生巨大且持久的发展影响。加强为婴儿和幼儿服务的儿科保健系统和 EHS 计划之间的伙伴关系,可以通过增加更有针对性的合作,更好地促进幼儿的健康和幸福,增强家庭的优势和适应能力。建议的具体策略包括加强跨服务平台的培训和专业发展,以增加共享知识和术语,增加获得筛查和服务的机会,加强基础设施和共享信息,加强服务整合,承认和打破种族主义,以及利用现有的资金和资源。本文提供了建议,包括基于研究的例子,以促进最符合社区需求和资源的创新。