The Nurture® Program
The first three years of a child's life is a critical time in brain development that will support all future capacities. Decades of research has shown that the way that parents interact with their young children forms the foundation of their readiness for school and overall success in life. Historically, the U.S. has provided almost no public support for meeting the psychosocial needs of new parents and their babies.
The Nurture® Program pairs moms of newborns with trained volunteer mentors to promote infant mental health and early language through an interactive text-messaging platform. We address four key building blocks of good parenting: secure attachment, which creates a strong sense of security and self-confidence; parent resilience, which determines a mom’s ability to manage maternal stress; parenting knowledge of accurate information and referral resources; and, child cognition. The Nurture® Program provides a highly cost-efficient and easily scalable model that also offers a unique opportunity to volunteer in a virtual environment.
Parents unquestionably are the most important people in young children's lives. Decades of research has shown that how parents interact with their young children forms the foundation of their readiness for school and overall success in life. Parents talking and reading to their babies, providing guided play, and praising effort are key ingredients to children's emotional regulation, which better predicts a healthy and successful life.
At the same time, becoming a parent is a jolting transition, which can often lead to increased maternal stress and not infrequently to perinatal depression and/or anxiety.
Historically, the U.S. has provided almost no public support for meeting the psychosocial needs of new parents. This is a missed opportunity given that there are structural changes in new parents’ brains that make them very open to change. Our intervention takes aim at reducing parent stress and at improving parent-child attachment and language activities.
The Nurture® Program’s focus is on moms of newborns along with their babies in western Pennsylvania. We are currently enrolling moms in five of the twelve hospitals in the region, and plan to expand to the remaining hospitals. Over 20,000 births a year occur in the region’s birthing centers, and we plan to be contacting all moms in the twelve hospitals by the end of 2023.
Our supervisors visit birthing centers and meet briefly with every mom on the visit day to explain the program. We do not select moms for the program based on any qualifying criteria, but rather invite all moms that we meet with to enroll. Moms decide whether or not to participate. For those moms who are interested, the supervisor enrolls her in the program and assigns her to a mentor who then reaches out to the mom following discharge to begin a dialogue.
Our community provides home visiting programs for parents to support the development of their new child. Because of cost, these programs are generally targeted only to the most at-risk parents. Many, perhaps lower-risk parents, who need help with parenting skills are not being served. For these parents, finding evidence-based information (such as how babies eat, sleep, play, learn and grow) at the exact time that it is needed can be challenging. Our program meets the needs of the moms by providing real-time support and information at the time they are needed.
Our primary mission is to provide an innovative program (Nurture® Program) that transforms how parents promote infant mental health (i.e., the healthy social emotional development of children between the ages of 0-3 years) and early language. The Nurture® Program pairs moms of newborns with trained volunteer mentors who provide parenting support and information through an interactive text-messaging platform.
Helping children grow up to be happy, healthy, and successful in life is a function of good parenting, particularly during a child’s early years. This is a critical time in brain development that will support all future capacities including intellectual abilities as well as emotional and psychological habits. Key building blocks of good parenting during these formative years are: (1) secure attachment, which creates a strong sense of security and deep-seated self-confidence; (2) parent resilience, which determines a mom’s ability to manage maternal stress; (3) parenting knowledge of accurate information and referral resources; and, (4) child cognition.
The Nurture® Program addresses these four key building blocks during a child’s first three years. Secure attachment is promoted by encouraging sensitive caregiving along with positive, serve-and-return interactions between mom and child (e.g., talking, reading, playing). Parent resilience along with parenting knowledge are supported by relieving maternal stress through a stable, positive mentoring relationship; providing evidence-based information at the time it is needed; and, making needed referrals. Child cognition is advanced by promoting cognitive as well as social emotional development including talking and reading activities.
All volunteer mentors are trained and supervised by managers who have a background in early child development and family support. Mentor training includes early child development along with procedures for creating a mentor/mom relationship that is characterized by trust and reciprocity. This type of relationship constitutes the required active ingredient of effective interventions and can be formed in a virtual environment. Mentor supervision is data-driven in that mentor evaluations are supported through a software tool that efficiently and consistently reports evaluation results to managers as a means of guiding ongoing mentor training and providing individual mentor feedback.
- Reduce barriers to healthy physical, mental, and emotional development for vulnerable populations
- Enable parents and caregivers to support their children’s overall development
- Growth
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