scholarly journals Converging on child mental health – toward shared global action for child development

2017 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Belkin ◽  
L. Wissow ◽  
C. Lund ◽  
L. Aber ◽  
Z. Bhutta ◽  
...  

We are a group of researchers and clinicians with collective experience in child survival, nutrition, cognitive and social development, and treatment of common mental conditions. We join together to welcome an expanded definition of child development to guide global approaches to child health and overall social development. We call for resolve to integrate maternal and child mental health with child health, nutrition, and development services and policies, and see this as fundamental to the health and sustainable development of societies. We suggest specific steps toward achieving this objective, with associated global organizational and resource commitments. In particular, we call for a Global Planning Summit to establish a much needed Global Alliance for Child Development and Mental Health in all Policies.

2012 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 84-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
Farzana Islam ◽  
Monowara Parveen ◽  
Rezina Parvin ◽  
Dilara Begum ◽  
Humaira Muslima ◽  
...  

Background: Shishu Bikash Kendra (SBK or Child Development Center) of the Dhaka Shishu (Children’s) Hospital (DSH) has been using a multidisciplinary approach for assessment and management of children with various neurodevelopmental disorders since its establishment in 1991. In the past decade, a major proportion have presented with a range of emotional and behavioural problems. This paper aims to describe the types of child psychiatric disorders and the multidisciplinary team approach used in this centre for diagnosis and management of these children.Patients and Methods: Clinical records of 300 children who were assessed by the Child Mental Health Clinic of SBK during April 2004 to December 2006 were analyzed. These children were among the 1648 children who were referred for behavioural problems after having a General Developmental assessment (GDA). Children received services by a team comprising of child health physicians, child neurologists, child psychologists, developmental therapists and psychosocial counselors and a social worker. Psychiatric conditions were diagnosed using the multi-axial diagnostic guidelines of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV) and the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10). The role of various clinics of the SBK to address specific aspects of a child’s mental health condition is described.Results: Of the 300 children seen 55% were of primary school age (ie, between 5-10 years), boys comprising 71%. The majority (94%) could be categorized into a psychiatric condition. Sixty three percent had a developmental problem. In addition, with 44% children having some intellectual deficit. Sixty one percent had an associated neurological or general medical condition. It was important to note also that 54% had some form of psychosocial adversity which needed immediate help. Commonest psychiatric diagnosis was Hyperkinetic Disorders (33%) followed by Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) and other Pervasive Developmental Disorders (PDD) (27%).Conclusion: Psychiatric morbidity is a common presentation among children who come to the child development and neurodisability service. If Child Mental Health professionals work with a multidisciplinary team within a child development service such as SBK, it may best utilize the multiaxial diagnosis system.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/bjch.v35i3.10385  Bangladesh J Child Health 2011; Vol 35 (3): 84-89


2021 ◽  
pp. 183-205
Author(s):  
David Rettew

The amount of time even young children spend watching television, playing video games, and generally looking at some sort of screen is truly astonishing. At the same time, technology has become a necessary part of so many aspects of our life. This chapter will summarize the evolving positions of many national child health organizations on screens and delve into the complex studies that have tried to measure the effects of media on child mental health and cognition with regards to things like aggression, anxiety, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Tips for helping children develop healthy habits for screen use are shared, and information is presented regarding how inherent qualities of the child need to be taken into account when looking at the potential risks and benefits of screen use for an individual child.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 43
Author(s):  
Yongmei Hou

Learning burnout is a common psychological problem of college students, which seriously affects college students' academic achievement and physical and mental health, wastes educational resources, and brings various hidden dangers to talent growth and social development. Starting from the definition of the concept of learning burnout, this paper introduces the dimension composition and measurement tools of college students' learning burnout, analyzes the influencing factors of college students' learning burnout, and puts forward the corresponding research prospects in view of the shortcomings of previous research.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 95 (5) ◽  
pp. 758-762 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barry Zuckerman ◽  
Steven Parker

The risks to children's well-being are accelerating because, in part, of an increasingly porous social safety net. Pediatricians are being asked to bear an ever-increasing burden for helping children and families address a myriad of issues, and they have become the providers of last resort. As the distance between what we should do and what we can do as clinicians widens, so too does our frustration and willingness to consider addressing yet one more issue. We often retreat to the comfortable world of otitis media and immunizations and shut out the loud cacophony of the outside world and its effects on our families. We need a new model of care, based on an ecological approach to child health consistent with Bright Futures,40 which provides child health supervision guidelines. To meet these needs, some settings may develop models in which skilled professionals can provide advocacy services, parental health, parental mental health, and child development services in the context of pediatric practice. Although most practices or clinic programs will not have the space or resources to include all of these services, the development and implementation of any one of them will enrich the care of children and families. Other services such as legal aid, family literacy, and mental health may be available in the community and could be colocated in the pediatric setting as outreach efforts on the part of these programs or linked in a manner that ensures accessibility. Similar enhancements to primary-care programs for special groups of children at risk, including those who are homeless, drug exposed, in foster care, and born to teen-age mothers, are being developed in many communities. The cost of such services presents difficult obstacles. However, given the progressive growth of prepaid practices and competition among plans for patients, services such as those provided by a child development specialist might increase the attractiveness of the plan and allow recruitment of more families. Reducing cigarette smoking, preventing unwanted pregnancy, and reducing drug and alcohol use have potential cost-saving implications that will interest managed-care programs. On the other hand, health care plans may limit services if potential financial benefits are uncertain or acrue to another sector such as schools. For populations at risk, especially health-education collaboration of this type (whether funded and/or cofunded with funds from federal or state department of education budgets, Medicaid, managed-care contracts, tobacco tax revenues, and/or federal family planning funds) should be pursued. Most of the services we have described are, in fact, already available in most communities and/or health plans. Without new net costs, it may be possible to reallocate some or all of these services to the pediatric primary-care setting in a single-site, one-stop-shopping model. Redeploying services to the pediatric primary-care setting may increase accessibility to these important preventive services and improve the health and well-being of children and their parents.


Author(s):  
Michael Baker ◽  
Mark Stabile

This article reviews the empirical studies to examine the validity of the notion that health in childhood has both short-term and longer-term economic consequences, and that childhood health is itself a function of a broader set of policies, investment decisions and parental choices, and a function of parental health stock and economic background. Economic research on the relationship between child mental health and economic outcomes is discussed in three categories. The article also includes the role that maternal behavior plays in the development of child health and behavior. It further examines the relationship between maternal substance abuse and child mental health as measured by a behavioral problems index. This article describes the determinants and role of investments in child health on later outcomes. It also identifies some priorities for future research.


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