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California policymakers must pay more attention to infants and toddlers, advocates say

According to a PHI survey, 46.7 percent of California’s parents and caregivers experienced trauma as a child, which can have lasting effects on a caregiver’s health, behavior and well-being. This finding was cited in a new report highlighted in this EdSource article outlining policy goals and guidelines to better serve California’s infants and toddlers.

Sixty-two percent of California’s nearly 2 million babies and toddlers are born into low-income households, making them more vulnerable to neglect, trauma and developmental delays, according to a new report released by Children Now, a statewide research and advocacy organization based in Oakland.

The report, titled “Starting Now: A Policy Vision for Supporting the Healthy Growth and Development of Every California Baby,” highlights policy goals and guidelines to better serve California’s infants and toddlers. It states that California isn’t spending enough on its youngest children at the most critical and formative years of their lives.

Ted Lempert, president of Children Now, said that the lack of investment is jeopardizing young children’s health and welfare as well as California’s economy. “Our state’s babies and toddlers deserve better,” Lempert said.

The report focuses on a broad range of issues affecting children’s health, welfare and education, including how to promote healthy children, foster stronger families, enrich early learning and strengthen communities.

The broad focus was deliberate and part of the central message in the report, said Stacy Lee, a managing director for Children Now and a member of the writing and research team on the report. California needs to have a range of strategies to effectively support young children and families, she said.

“There is no silver bullet to ensuring that children get everything they need. There has to be a comprehensive ray of support and a system that addresses some of the serious issues this population is affected by,” Lee said. “There is a patchwork and there is an ecosystem, but they are not always well coordinated in California.”

To promote healthy children, the report outlines that policies should “ensure all children receive regular, routine developmental screenings in health care settings and are linked to needed supports as appropriate.” It also says that state officials need to ensure maximum enrollment in health coverage programs like Medi-Cal and food nutrition service programs such as Women, Infants and Children (WIC).

The report also said child care for infants and toddlers is “largely unavailable and often prohibitively expensive.”

The report emphasizes that policies need to align to ensure that all professionals working with young children and families complete coursework or training on trauma-informed practices, which includes training on reporting child abuse and neglect. According to a Public Health Institute survey cited in the report, 46.7 percent of California’s parents and caregivers experienced trauma as a child, something that can have a lasting affect on a caregiver’s health, behavior and well-being.

Continue reading the full article in EdSource.

Originally published by EdSource


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