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Not built for families: Associations between neighborhood disinvestment and reduced parental cognitive stimulation

Canfield, Caitlin F; O'Connell, Lauren; Sadler, Richard C; Gutierrez, Juliana; Williams, Shanna; Mendelsohn, Alan L
Infants learn and develop within an ecological context that includes family, peers, and broader built and social environments. This development relies on proximal processes-reciprocal interactions between infants and the people and environments around them that help them understand their world. Most research examining predictors of proximal processes like parent-child interaction and parenting has focused on elements within the home and family. However, factors like the neighborhood built environment may also exhibit an influence, and may be particularly critical in infancy, as socioeconomic disparities in cognition and language emerge early in life. Moreover, influence from the built environment could independently exacerbate these disparities, as research indicates that neighborhood impacts may be especially relevant for families living in neighborhoods that have experienced disinvestment and therefore have been under-resourced. The current study examines these questions by determining the association of neighborhood vacancy rate and observed physical disorder-indicators of poverty, residential stability, and long-term structural discrimination-with parental cognitive stimulation among predominantly Black/African-American families in Flint, Michigan. Flint is particularly salient for this study because vacancy rates and disinvestment vary widely across the city, driven by its long-time status as a city struggling economically. Regression analyses controlling for caregiver education, mental health, and social support indicated that vacancy rate and physical disorder negatively predicted parental cognitive stimulation. Moreover, there were significant interactions between the built environment and social support, indicating that, particularly for parent-child shared reading, vacancy rate and physical disorder predicted reduced shared reading only when parents had limited social support. These results have important implications for public policy around vacant property demolition and neighborhood reinvestment programs, as they indicate that the neighborhood built environment is associated with parenting behaviors that have important impacts on infants' learning and development.
PMCID:9606826
PMID: 36312120
ISSN: 1664-1078
CID: 5358392

Integrating Health Care Strategies to Prevent Poverty-Related Disparities in Development and Growth: Addressing Core Outcomes of Early Childhood

Gross, Rachel S; Messito, Mary Jo; Klass, Perri; Canfield, Caitlin F; Yin, H Shonna; Morris, Pamela A; Shaw, Daniel S; Dreyer, Benard P; Mendelsohn, Alan L
Poverty-related disparities appear early in life in cognitive, language, and social-emotional development, and in growth, especially obesity, and have long-term consequences across the life course. It is essential to develop effective strategies to promote healthy behaviors in pregnancy and the early years of parenthood that can mitigate disparities. Primary preventive interventions within the pediatric primary care setting offer universal access, high engagement, and population-level impact at low cost. While many families in poverty or with low income would benefit from preventive services related to both development and growth, most successful interventions have tended to focus on only one of these domains. In this manuscript, we suggest that it may be possible to address both development and growth simultaneously and effectively. In particular, current theoretical models suggest alignment in mechanisms by which poverty can create barriers to parent-child early relational health (i.e., parenting practices, creating structure, and parent-child relationship quality), constituting a final common pathway for both domains. Based on these models and related empirical data, we propose a strength-based, whole child approach to target common antecedents through positive parenting and prevent disparities in both development and growth; we believe this approach has the potential to transform policy and practice. Achieving these goals will require new payment systems that make scaling of primary prevention in health care feasible, research funding to assess efficacy/effectiveness and inform implementation, and collaboration among early childhood stakeholders, including clinicians across specialties, scientists across academic disciplines, and policy makers.
PMID: 34740424
ISSN: 1876-2867
CID: 5038532

Promotion of Parental Responsivity: Implications for Population-Level Implementation and Impact

Roby, Erin; Canfield, Caitlin F; Mendelsohn, Alan L
PMID: 34261809
ISSN: 1098-4275
CID: 4938732

Father involvement in infancy predicts behavior and response to chronic stress in middle childhood in a low-income Latinx sample

Roby, Erin; Piccolo, Luciane R; Gutierrez, Juliana; Kesoglides, Nicole M; Raak, Caroline D; Mendelsohn, Alan L; Canfield, Caitlin F
Fathers' involvement in early childhood is important for children's physical, emotional, and cognitive development, particularly in low-income families. However, little is known about the longitudinal relations between early father involvement and children's later physiological responses to chronic stress and behaviors impacted by stress in the context of poverty. These issues are particularly important among Latinx immigrant families who face significant psychosocial and poverty-related risk. In the current study, we examined the relationship between father involvement in infancy and physiological chronic stress in the middle childhood period, as measured through hair cortisol concentration (HCC), and several behavioral measures (attention problems, working memory) in a Latinx immigrant sample with low income. Father involvement in infancy predicted children's later HCC, and working memory in second to third grade. Father involvement also moderated the effect of HCC on working memory, such that increased HCC predicted better working memory when fathers were not involved. These findings suggest that the fathers' involvement in infancy has lasting impacts on health and behavior and that associations between physiological and behavioral measures of stress may be moderated by differences in early father involvement.
PMCID:8254829
PMID: 33398881
ISSN: 1098-2302
CID: 4931882

Pediatric primary care and partnerships across sectors to promote early child development

Roby, Erin; Shaw, Daniel S; Morris, Pamela; Canfield, Caitlin F; Miller, Elizabeth B; Dreyer, Benard; Klass, Perri; Ettinger, Anna; Miller, Elizabeth; Mendelsohn, Alan L
Poverty remains a critical predictor of children's school readiness, health and longer term outcomes. Early relational health (ERH) (i.e., parenting practices and relationship quality) mediates the impact of poverty on child development, and thus has been the focus of many parenting interventions. Despite the documented efficacy of parenting interventions at reducing poverty-related disparities in child health and development, several key barriers prevent achieving population-level reach to families with young children. In the current paper we highlight several of these barriers including gaining population-level access to young children and families, reaching families only through single points of access, addressing the significant heterogeneity of risk that exists among families living in poverty, as well as addressing each of these barriers in combination. We suggest that understanding and confronting these barriers will allow family-centered interventions to more effectively address issues related to ERH at a population level, which in turn will reduce poverty-related disparities in child development.
PMID: 33352322
ISSN: 1876-2867
CID: 4726522

Improving Parent-Child Interactions in Pediatric Health Care: A Two-Site Randomized Controlled Trial

Roby, Erin; Miller, Elizabeth B; Shaw, Daniel S; Morris, Pamela; Gill, Anne; Bogen, Debra L; Rosas, Johana; Canfield, Caitlin F; Hails, Katherine A; Wippick, Helena; Honoroff, Julia; Cates, Carolyn B; Weisleder, Adriana; Chadwick, Kelly A; Raak, Caroline D; Mendelsohn, Alan L
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:Heterogeneity in risk among low-income families suggests the need for tiered interventions to prevent disparities in school readiness. Smart Beginnings (SB) integrates two interventions: Video Interaction Project (VIP) (birth to 3 years), delivered universally to low-income families in pediatric primary care, and Family Check-Up (6 months to 3 years), targeted home visiting for families with additional family risks. Our objective was to assess initial SB impacts on parent-child activities and interactions at 6 months, reflecting early VIP exposure. METHODS:Two-site randomized controlled trial in New York City (84% Latinx) and Pittsburgh (81% Black), with postpartum enrollment and random assignment to treatment (SB) or control. At 6 months, we assessed parent-child interactions through surveys (StimQ, Parenting Your Baby) and observation (video-recorded play, coded by using Parent-Child Interaction Rating Scales - Infant Adaptation). RESULTS:< .001). Thus, significant effects emerged across a broad sample by using varied methodologies. CONCLUSIONS:Findings replicate and extend previous VIP findings across samples and assessment methodologies. Examining subsequent assessments will determine impacts and feasibility of the full SB model, including potential additive impacts of Family Check-Up for families at elevated risk.
PMID: 33608413
ISSN: 1098-4275
CID: 4793982

Beyond language: Impacts of shared reading on parenting stress and early parent-child relational health

Canfield, Caitlin F; Miller, Elizabeth B; Shaw, Daniel S; Morris, Pamela; Alonso, Angelica; Mendelsohn, Alan L
This study examined the interrelated and longitudinal impacts of parent-child shared book reading, parenting stress, and early relational health, as measured by both parental warmth and parent sensitivity, from infancy to toddlerhood. To extend findings from previous studies of collateral effects that have been conducted in parenting interventions, we examined parenting behaviors in a broader context to determine whether shared book reading would confer collateral benefits to the parent and parent-child relationship beyond those expected (i.e., language and literacy). It was hypothesized that positive parent-child interactions, such as shared reading, would have positive impacts on parent outcomes such as parenting stress, parental warmth, and sensitivity. The sample consisted of 293 low-income mothers and their children who participated in a randomized controlled trial. Shared book reading, parenting stress, and parental warmth were assessed when children were 6 and 18 months old. We computed a series of cross-lagged structural equation models to examine longitudinal interrelations among these three factors. Results indicated that shared book reading at 6 months was associated with increases in observed and reported parental warmth and observed sensitivity and decreases in parenting stress at 18 months, controlling for baseline risk factors and treatment group status. These findings suggest that early parent-child book reading can have positive collateral impacts on parents' stress and the parent-child relationship over time. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
PMID: 32352828
ISSN: 1939-0599
CID: 4412682

Sociodemographic and Psychosocial Predictors of VIP Attendance in Smart Beginnings Through 6 Months: Effectively Targeting At-Risk Mothers in Early Visits

Miller, Elizabeth B; Canfield, Caitlin F; Morris, Pamela A; Shaw, Daniel S; Cates, Carolyn Brockmeyer; Mendelsohn, Alan L
Past research on predictors of participation in early childhood parenting programs suggest that families experiencing higher levels of sociodemographic adversity (e.g., younger maternal age, single parenthood, lower income or education) are less likely to participate in parenting programs. This is significant, as it may indicate that those most in need of additional support are the least likely to receive it. Data from a randomized control trial (RCT) of Smart Beginnings, an integrated, tiered model for school readiness, were used to explore predictors of attendance in Video Interaction Project (VIP) through 6 months. VIP is a primary preventive intervention delivered in tandem with pediatric well-child visits, aimed at reducing income-based disparities in early child development through promotion of responsive parent-child interactions. Using Poisson distribution models (N = 403; treatment arm, n = 201), we find that demographic, socioeconomic status (SES), and psychosocial variables are associated with program attendance but not always in the expected direction. While analyses show that first-time mothers have higher levels of program attendance as expected, we find that less-educated mothers and those with lower parenting self-efficacy have higher levels of attendance as well. The latter findings may imply that the VIP intervention is, by some indicators, effectively targeting families who are more challenging to engage and retain. Implications for pediatric-based interventions with population-level accessibility are discussed.
PMID: 31432380
ISSN: 1573-6695
CID: 4046772

The Video Interaction Project (VIP)

Chapter by: Canfield, Caitlin; Roby, Erin; Mendelsohn, Alan
in: Ending the physical punishment of children: A guide for clinicians and practitioners by Gershoff, Elizabeth T [Ed]; Lee, Shawna J [Ed]
Washington, DC, US: American Psychological Association, 2020
pp. 73-80
ISBN: 9781433831140
CID: 4231322

Encouraging parent-child book sharing: Potential additive benefits of literacy promotion in health care and the community

Canfield, Caitlin F; Seery, Anne; Weisleder, Adriana; Workman, Catherine; Brockmeyer Cates, Carolyn; Roby, Erin; Payne, Rachel; Levine, Shari; Mogilner, Leora; Dreyer, Benard; Mendelsohn, Alan
Children from low-income families are more likely than their higher income peers to show delays in language and literacy skills, both at school entry and across the lifespan. Programs aimed at promoting language and literacy activities in the home, particularly programs that combine distribution of print materials with support and guidance for using them, have been effective in decreasing the word gap, leading to increased school readiness and early literacy. The current study examined the impact of such a program based in pediatric healthcare, Reach Out and Read (ROR), on parents' use of community resources that also provide access to print-namely, the public library-in the context of a citywide initiative to link literacy resources for low-income families. Effects of both ROR and the library, both individually and combined, on parents' literacy activities at home were then examined. Significant associations between receiving ROR, using the public library, and parent-child book sharing were found. Implications for intervention and policy are discussed.
PSYCH:2019-76698-007
ISSN: 1873-7706
CID: 4331292