Title: Understanding the Early Years: Discerning a Response System
1Understanding the Early Years Discerning a
Response System
- Linda L. Nosbush
- Community Research Coordinator
- Prince Albert Pilot Site
2City of Prince Albert Looking South
3Wapaweka Sawmill Prince Albert Northern Boreal
Forest
4The Virtuous Circle
Prosperous Society
Innovation and Competitive Workforce
Social Stability
Resources to Fund Programs that Foster Healthy
Child Development
Healthy Children and Adolescents
Healthy Child Development
5
5A Web of Protectionenables the development of
courageous human beings who not only survive but
thrive.
Healthy babies, healthy children, healthy
communities, strong nations The Unbeatable
Combination
6Determinants of Health, Well-being and
CompetenceSocial Determinants of Health
- World Health Organization
- Social class health gradient
- Stress
- Early Life
- Social Exclusion
- Work
- Unemployment
- Social Support,
- Addiction
- Food
- Transport
- York University
- Income and its distribution
- Early Life
- Education
- Employment Working Conditions
- Food Security,
- Health Care Services
- Housing
- Social Safety Net
- Social Exclusion
- Unemployment employment security
If we continue to ignore these broader policy
issues,promoting healthy lifestyles and
increasing spending on medical care are unlikely
to succeed in maintaining and improving the
health of Canadians. Dennis Raphael, 2003
7Socioeconomic Gradients
desired
problematic
Literacy Level
Socioeconomic Indicator Parents Level of Education
8Socioeconomic Gradients
- The pattern wherein risk increases in a stepwise
fashion as one descends the socioeconomic ladder
is known as a gradient and once established it
tracks across the life course (Hertzman, 2002) - Steep gradients give important clues as to
whether a society is supporting or undermining
the development of its populationsteep gradients
are associated with overall poor outcomes in
comparisons among countries or regions (Keating
Hertzman, 1999)
9Socioeconomic Gradients
- Indicate causal relationships
- Are influenced at various levels of social
aggregation - Are evident for all major diseases and
competencies that affect health and well-being - Even when major diseases change, the gradient
replicates itself - Point to fundamental biological processes
connecting Socioeconomic Progress to human
resilience and vulnerability, to disease, and
strongly suggest a role for early childhood
development - Are expressed over the entire life course but
they appear early in life - - Hertzman 2000
10Socioeconomic Gradients
- Early Childhood Development initiates gradients
in health, well-being, and competence throughout
the life course according to three processes - Latent Effects
- Pathway Effects
- Cumulative Effects
- Social Exclusion has many forms and sometimes it
can occur when there are no distinguishing
features features evident one of the most subtle
forms emerges early in life when the child is in
the process of becoming and it shapes
childrens readiness to learn at school - If our physical and social environments, and the
institutions that govern them, systematically
limit the chances of some groups of children to
develop as fully as others, then this too is a
form of social exclusion (Hertzman 2002).
11Community Influences on Child Development
PARENT
COMMUNITY
Current
CHILD
Past
POTENTIAL INFLUENCES
OUTCOMES
Physical
Social
Emotional
Language
Cognitive
Communication
Learning
12Five Developmental DomainsEarly Development
Instrument
- Physical Health and Well-being
- Social Knowledge and Competence
- Emotional Health and Maturity
- Language Cognitive Development
- Communication Skills General Knowledge
13Readiness to Learn
Of 621 children
- 71 of our children lack the Physical Health and
Well-being - 62 of our children lack Emotional Maturity
- 65 of you will lack Social Competence
- 69 of you will lack the Language
- and Cognitive abilities necessary
- 53 of you will lack Communication and
- General Knowledge Skills
151 of our children lack readiness to learn in
one domain 86 of our children lack readiness to
learn in two or more domains.
14Examining Readiness to Learn ScoresAcross the
Distribution Our goal is to have all children
ready to learn when they enter school but alas
that is not so..
Children who will readily adapt to school the
transition will be negotiated with little or no
support.
Children who will have problems adapting to
school.
Children who are at-risk for adapting to school.
Children who are above average in their ability
to adapt to school there will be a transition
but they will make it easily.
Children who are below average in their ability
to adapt to school but with support will be able
to do so.
15Early Development Instrument Percentage of
Children Who Lack Readiness to LearnIn the
Prince Albert Area
These neighbourhoods have many children who lack
readiness to learn at school.
These neighbourhoods have most children ready to
learn at school.
Vulnerability Cut-Off - All things being equal
10 of the children would fall into the bottom
10 for the study area as a whole.
16Early Development Instrument Percentage of
Children Who Lack Readiness to LearnIn the
Prince Albert Area
These neighbourhoods have many children who lack
readiness to learn at school.
9 schools have more than 30 of children who lack
readiness to learn
These neighbourhoods have most children ready to
learn
17- Children who lack readiness to learn
- In one domain
- 2000 23.8
- 2001 24.4
- 2003 24.3 (151 children)
- In two or more domains
- 2000 12.3
- 2001 14.9
- 2003 13.8 (86 children)
18If we have only one start in life Let it be a
strong one!
19Building A Framework for Understanding
- We are responsible for
- Opening doors
- Ensuring that these doors stay open
- Helping children to walk through these doors
- Being a role model for children
- Helping children to develop a sense of a
brighter future
20Safe Start and Healthy Start
Physical Health well-being
- Physical Readiness for School Day
- Physical Independence
- Gross and Fine Motor Skills
21Connected Start
Social Competence
- Overall social competence
- Responsibility respect
- Approaches to learning
- Readiness to explore new things
22Sensitive Start
Emotional Maturity
- Prosocial and helping behaviour
- Anxious and fearful behaviour
- Aggressive behaviour
- Hyperactivity and inattention
23Smart Start
Language Cognitive Development
- Basic literacy
- Interest in literacy/numeracy memory
- Advanced literacy
- Basic numeracy
24Smart Start
Communication Skills General Knowledge
- Communication skills and general knowledge
25The New PovertyHaberman, Harvard, 1993
- Todays poverty is unlike that of the past.
Children experiencing the new poverty face the
following - Growing up without adults they can trust
- Living in communities where violence abuse of
human beings is high - Experiencing feelings of despair and lack of
hope - Witnessing their familys inhuman treatment from
the bureaucracies that were established to help
them - Resigning themselves to a state of
powerlessness, being at the whim of some other
authority outside their families.
26Our Recommendations to Change the Outcomes for
Our Children
- Four Pillars of Response
- Collaboration
- Human Capital based on lifelong learning
- Social Inclusion
- Program Evaluation, Monitoring Research
27Prince Albert has been busy
- National Presentations
- Province of Alberta
- Senate of Canada work on National Plan of Action
for Children (in response to the United Nations
A World Fit for Children - Local Presentations
- Food Security Policy (in principle)
- Integrated Nursing Program with University of
Saskatchewan - National Publication for Vanier Institute for
the Family - Transitions - Action Planning Day
28 Service Integration
- Joining of forces, knowledge and means
- To understand and solve complex issues
- Whose solutions lie outside the capacity and
responsibility of a single sector
Federal/Provincial/Territorial Advisory Committee
on Population Health Intersectoral Action Towards
Population Health, 1999
29Health, Well-being, and Competence
- Are communal responsibilities
- Are determined in the same way
- But, we all have a role to play in how the
future unfolds . . . .
30We live, love, learn, and develop our human-being
in the shelter of each other.
Can we each go forth to make Prince Albert a
place where all can, not only survive, but thrive?