Prevention and Early Intervention Programme Presentation to the Trinity College Summer School, August 2012.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Leicestershires Vision for short break transformation Leicestershire is committed to the transformation and expansion of short break services for disabled.
Advertisements

The Current Context Don McGillivray Positive Futures Division Children, Young People and Social Care Directorate.
TRANSFORMING EDUCATION THROUGH EVIDENCE. The Centre for Effective Education SCHOOL OF Education Conducting Educational Randomised Control Trials in Disadvantaged.
GO GOLDFIELDS A New Role for Local Government in Social Change.
Maggie Carter Assistant Director, Learner & Family Support
Increasing staff engagement across children’s services Di Smith Director of Children’s Services.
Children, Families and Poverty Ross A. Thompson, Ph.D. Department of Psychology.
Potential for interventions in the early years to tackle health inequalities Karen MacNee Health ASD.
Sylda Langford Director General Office of the Minister for Children (OMC) University College Cork 27 November, 2006.
Government commitments to Prevention and Early Intervention Winnie Donoghue PEIN Residential, June 2014.
CW/MH Learning Collaborative First Statewide Leadership Convening Lessons Learned from the Readiness Assessment Tools Lisa Conradi, PsyD Project Co-Investigator.
A. Support for key statutory services Grants ProgrammesFunding CategoriesCriteria 2. Youth Work Chart of Grant Programmes, Funding Categories and Priority.
Nottingham Early Intervention City Katy Ball, Head of Early Intervention and Market Development Nottingham City Council.
“Fit and Well – Changing Lives 2012 – 2022” Michael Mc Bride Chief Medical Officer DHSSPS Fit and Well – Changing Lives is the new cross – cutting Public.
Healthy Child Development Suggestions for Submitting a Strong Proposal.
Teenage conceptions in Wales The challenge of intervention and evaluation.
JOINING THE DOTS Connecting schools, voluntary and community sector and commissioning for better outcomes in emotional health and wellbeing.
Children Looked After at Home Improving outcomes – joint working and service delivery Alistair Gaw City of Edinburgh Council.
MOST PROJECT Presentation on Final Phase Findings.
2013.  Established 2007;  One of the three Prevention and Early Intervention Programme Initiatives; “ We were set up with the objective of testing innovative.
Bromley Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) ‘The role of Bromley CCG in meeting the health needs of children and young people and their families’. Presented.
Welcome to the 1 st Annual Summer Early Childhood Public Policy Institute!
TRANSITION PROJECT LEARNING NETWORK WORKSHOP 3 AISLING PROJECT: TRANSITION PROJECT.
Children and Young Peoples Strategic Partnership Presentation Bronagh Donnelly.
Promoting and Supporting Mental Health & Student Wellbeing in Schools Dr Treasa Kirk Senior Inspector Department of Education and Skills Frances Shearer.
Seminar on Evidence Based Policy Making Professor Michael Little, Dartington Social Research Unit & University of Chicago 24 July 2006.
Suki Norris/Kristie Hill/Bernice Cooke Somerset Partnership
Minding the Baby. Summary Minding the Baby is an intensive home-visiting programme for vulnerable, first-time pregnant women and their families. It is.
Implementing the Scottish Government’s Strategic Guidance for Community Learning & Development The Voluntary Sector Role Third Sector Interface conference,
ACJRD 16 th Annual Conference 4 th October  2007: Prevention and Early Intervention Programme, funded by DYCA and The Atlantic Philanthropies;
Integrated Youth Support and Targeted Youth Support Margaret Mitchell Youth Policy Adviser.
Coming Together for Young Children and Families.  What we know  Where we have been  Where we are today  Where we need to go.
Incorporating Research into Academic Learning & Professional Development 4 th October 2013.
Gráinne Smith Childhood Development Initiative (CDI) Accessing Primary Care: Lessons and Insights for Disadvantaged Communities.
Mobilising local communities Community consultations.
Early Help Strategy Achieving better outcomes for children, young people and families, by developing family resilience and intervening early when help.
Evidence-based policymaking: Seeking to do more good than harm Helen Jones Professional Adviser.
“Positive Beginnings” Michael White A/Executive Director, Office for Children Department of Education and Early Childhood Development Presentation to Best.
Croydon Children and Families Partnership Commissioning priorities 13 February 2013.
Better Evidence for a Better Start the social research unit at dartington.
Ecology of family support: View from Wales child centred and family focused Society – macro inequalities and deprived neighbourhoods Community – meso social.
Commissioning Self Analysis and Planning Exercise activity sheets.
September 23 rd  Established 2007;  One of the three Prevention and Early Intervention Programme Initiatives; “ We were set up with the objective.
Foundations and Best Practices in Early Childhood Education: History, Theories and Approaches to Learning, 2 nd Edition © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
+ How Do We Get There From Here? The Role of the Early Childhood Advisory Council in System Building Helene Stebbins NH Early Childhood Advisory Council.
Prevention and Early Intervention Programme (PEIP) – An Irish experience of Scaling and Capacity Development in Communities experiencing Social and Economic.
Early help – some signals and examples Nick Page 18 March 2013.
September 21 st 2012 Meeting needs, making changes, improving outcomes. Dr Sinéad McNally CDI Voice of Community RESPOND! JUBILEE30 CONFERENCE 2012.
September 7 th 2011 Meeting needs, making changes, improving outcomes.
Terry Reynolds June 2009 Priorities for Improving Opportunities for Children and Young People.
Helping Families update Scrutiny Select Committee Meeting March 2013 Nick Page.
North West Youth Employment Convention Wednesday, 23 November 2011 Nick Page.
Scale of the challenge: thirty in every hundred children are living in poverty National average More than 7,000 families and over 14,500 children are.
@theEIFoundation | eif.org.uk Early Intervention to prevent gang and youth violence: ‘Maturity Matrix’ Early intervention (‘EI’) is about getting extra.
2 nd Year Principals Programme Day 1 TEC Omagh Tuesday 2 nd December 2008 Leading in time of changes.
CDI Presentation to Graduate Research Education Programme Inventing Communities: The Challenges Ahead February 18 th 2011.
ChildONEurope Seminar Current EU Framework for addressing child poverty and well-being Julie Bélanger, Research Leader 26 November 2015.
Croydon Children and Families Partnership Commissioning priorities 13 February 2013.
Lorna Howarth Local Parenting Strategy Team Families Policy, Development & Delivery Unit Parenting Support Policy Update.
A DAY IN THE LIFE OF A HEALTH VISITOR. Jane Dingley (Health Visitor/Practice Teacher Oct 2013)
AHPs as Agents of Change in Health and Social Care Information and Action Planning Seminar for SLT Leads.
Developing a Strategic Framework for Early Intervention: Children, Young People and Families Faith Mann Director of Targeted and Early Intervention Services.
21/06/20161 Department for Children Schools and Families £60 million investment across 3 phases. Aim:  to support the development of innovative.
Welcome! Improving the Transition (‘Gluckman Report’) Green Paper for Vulnerable Children 10 November 2011 Rotorua Safer Families.
Childhood Development Initiative
West Midlands Member Network
DR MARWA EL MISSIRY A.PROFESSOR OF PSYCHIATRY AIN SHAMS UNIVERSITY
Quality Early Childhood Care and Development:
Early help: councillor training
Presentation transcript:

Prevention and Early Intervention Programme Presentation to the Trinity College Summer School, August 2012.

Presentation Overview: What is the Prevention and Early Intervention Programme (PEIP)? Why was PEIP needed? What does the PEIP do? What have we learned?

What is Prevention and Early Intervention? Strategies aimed at realising the full potential of children, families and communities; Building skills and capacities to prevent the occurrence of problems, or prevention of a problem getting worse; Intervening at a young age or early on in the development of a difficulty.

Why Prevention and Early Intervention? Despite investment, historically poor outcomes in areas of disadvantage; Minimal resources targeted at beginning of life cycle; Focus on crisis response at expense of promotion, prevention and early intervention; Absence of evidence-informed, integrated service design; Lack of community and parental engagement and trust in services.

Integrated prevention and early intervention Costly and intractable educational, health and mental health problems occur because children families don’t have appropriate and/or sufficient services, early enough Prevention and early intervention can improve outcomes for children at risk of poverty Integrated Prevention and Early Intervention promotes – secure attachment – age-appropriate social and emotional development and pro social behaviour – positive protective relationships – language and literacy skills – mental health. Prevention and Early Intervention has a critical role to play in preventing tragic and costly consequences for children and families

Prevention and Early Intervention Programme 3 area-based prevention and early intervention sites – Ballymun: youngballymun – Dublin 17: Preparing for Life – Tallaght West: Childhood Development Initiative (CDI) Identified due to: – Leadership in the communities; – Willingness to engage in new approaches; – High levels of disadvantage on a range of indicators; – High child populations.

Common Statistics (2005): Unemployment House hold headed by lone parent Educational attainment Mental health needs Behaviour 14.5% (three times the national average) 50% Twice national average of early school leaving 30% + adults receiving treatment for depression 25% 4 year olds displayed behavioural difficulty.

Common Features: Jointly funded by Atlantic Philanthropies and Department of Children and Youth Affairs – total investment of €36m over 5 years; Driving evidence-based, outcomes-focused prevention and early intervention approaches in children’s services; Innovative delivery; Rigorous evaluation.

Programme Themes A life cycle approach – Starts pre birth, continues through infancy, early childhood, school years and community wide – Focus on 0-6 years period, particularly essential 0-3 foundation stage Evidence of what works – Needs-led strategies, drawing on evidence-based approaches Integrated services model – Fostering widespread engagement, collective identification of issues, development of responses and ownership of strategy – Collective realignment of capacity to deliver evidence-based services A focus on implementation – Rigorous attention to practice detail, regular review of delivery, culture of continuous improvement

Practice themes Activate health and community services to build and mobilise parental resources from pregnancy, infancy and throughout children’s lives Develop high quality early years care and education services Engage with schools to implement balanced literacy frameworks and social and emotional development initiatives Work with community providers to amplify capacity in youth mental health, restorative practice and community safety

Overarching messages for improving children’s lives 1: Mandate integrated prevention and early intervention in service provision for children and families 2: Drive the implementation of area-based approaches to tackle child poverty 3: Build requirements for evidence-based practice into funding conditions

What have we learned about evidence-based practice? It is a new approach to children’s services It values evidence and mandates accountability Requires a strong information base Investing in evidence-based approaches has the greatest chance of being effective Services must be developed in response to identified need Initiatives aimed at improving outcomes for children need to be strongly based on evidence, rigorously implemented and evaluated.

Thank You The Prevention and Early Intervention Programme is jointly funded by The Atlantic Philanthropies and The Department of Children and Youth Affairs For further information visit our websites: