Engaging and Supporting Young Children and their Families in Early Childhood Mental Health Services: The Role of the Family Partner

Date

2021-02-28

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

Nayak, S.S., Tobias, C., Wolfe, J. et al. Engaging and Supporting Young Children and their Families in Early Childhood Mental Health Services: The Role of the Family Partner. Community Ment Health J 58, 87–98 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10597-021-00796-8

Rights

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CC BY 4.0 DEED Attribution 4.0 International

Subjects

Abstract

This study explores the role of family partners, peer professionals with lived experiences of raising a child with behavioral health needs, and their value in primary and community-care based mental health services for young children aged 0–8 years. Interviews and focus groups were conducted with staff, leadership, and caregiver participants (n = 38) from two early childhood mental health programs and analyzed using thematic analysis. Five interdependent themes emerged: (1) the centrality of lived experience to the family partner role; (2) the importance of the family partner in family engagement and relationship building; (3) the value added by the family partner in navigating systems; (4) the ability of the family partner to build skills and empower caregivers; (5) the role of the family partner in alleviating caregiver stress and other mental health concerns. Adapting and expanding the role of family partners will improve effective mental health care for children and their caregivers.