Starting Points Meeting the Needs of Our Youngest Children Abridged Version Promote Responsible Parenthood We begin with parenting--the most critical starting point. Perhaps nothing we humans do is more relentlessly demanding. To parent a child entails at least two decades of sustained attention; many see it as a lifetime commitment. It is difficult to think of an enterprise that is more deeply private. Childrearing is inseparable from daily domesticity--that messy accumulation of meals and rent payments, laughter and laundry, that fills a home. The kind of care parents give to children, the context they create for their growth, and the framework they create for later learning spring from the rhythms of that life and from the values that give it meaning. At the same time, it is difficult to imagine an enterprise that has greater impact on public life--on the productivity of our citizenry, the vitality of our culture, and the strength of our public institutions. The time, resources, and energy that parents give to their children influence the children's success as students and their contributions as citizens. Developing social policy related to early childhood means negotiating the middle ground between these private and public interests. The goal of the task force, in addressing the issue of responsible parenthood, was not to prescribe an approach to childrearing; rather, we sought to identify the kinds of information and services parents need for their own self-directed learning and growth, so that they can make sound choices for their children. [See Opportunities for Promoting Responsible Parenthood sidebar.] We proceed from these assumptions: When women and men make a reasoned commitment to have children, they are more likely to parent well. Their growing children are more likely to meet life with optimism, competence, and compassion. And when women and men are unprepared for the opportunities and responsibilities of parenthood--as is the case all too often in America today--the risks to their children are many and serious. How then can those who want children prepare themselves for the opportunities and responsibilities of parenthood? How can society help? The task force found that those undertaking parenthood would benefit from education, services, and support in three key areas: ¥Planned childbearing ¥Prenatal care and support ¥Parent education and support Promote Planned Childbearing One of the most effective ways to promote healthy child development is to encourage women and men to plan childbearing so that it occurs under circumstances that minimize risk for the child. Too often in America, childbearing is not planned. Fully 56 percent of all pregnancies in this country are unintended--one of the highest rates of unintended pregnancy in the industrialized world. The risks of child abuse and neglect, low birthweight, and infant mortality are greater for unplanned children than for those actively planned and welcomed into the world. The rising rate of adolescent pregnancies, 80 percent of which are unplanned, is a particular cause for concern. The costs to society of adolescent pregnancy are immense. In the six years from 1985 to 1990, public outlays related to adolescent childbearing totaled more than $120 billion. It has been estimated that more than $48 billion could have been saved if these births had been postponed until the women were at least twenty years old. Efforts to promote planned childbearing must be a part of widely available preventive health services, and they will be most effective when they occur in the context of better life options and increased economic opportunities for both men and women. If young women and men are to delay parenthood, they need to have available to them other life options more appropriate to their age. Increasing the proportion of planned, low-risk births requires a national commitment to making family planning services and information widely and easily accessible, making new forms of contraception more readily available, and involving men in family planning efforts. A full range of family planning services must be accessible so that when birth control efforts fail, other services are obtainable, including comprehensive prenatal services and, in some circumstances, abortion and adoption services. Public investment in family planning is known to be cost-effective. According to one set of calculations, every public dollar spent to provide contraceptive services saves an average of $4.40 that would have to be spent on medical care, welfare, and other social services for women who would qualify for such services if they became pregnant. In this way, public investment in family planning saves taxpayers over $3 million each year. Despite the clear financial benefits of family planning services, the available funds have been drastically reduced. The task force recommends a substantial increase in the resources for family planning services so that they are funded at a level high enough to meet documented needs. Additionally, we recommend that family planning services be included among the preventive health services required as part of a minimum benefits package in health care reform. Research confirms the lessons of common sense: it is unwise to isolate planning for a family from general health and social services and education about parenting. The task force concurs with the U.S. Public Health Service in recommending that, by the year 2000, all parents-to-be make a pre-conception health visit that would provide comprehensive information about nutrition, contraception, and healthy behaviors, as well as identify existing problems and refer them for treatment. The task force also recommends a substantial expansion of efforts to educate young people about parenthood. Families should be the first source of such education, but schools, places of worship, and community-based youth development organizations also have parts to play. Age-appropriate, culturally sensitive education about parenthood can begin in elementary school, but no later than early adolescence, and should cover ¥ The development of infants, young children, and adolescents, and how parents, families, and communities can meet their needs ¥ Models of childrearing, parenting skills, and the significance of family composition and environment on child development ¥ The impact of childbearing and childrearing on the educational and occupational choices of parents, especially mothers ¥ Human reproduction, including the role of overall health in reproductive outcomes; methods of birth control, including abstinence; and the importance of health protection and promotion in the prenatal period ¥ The causes of sexually transmitted diseases and ways of avoiding them ¥ The effect of behavioral and environmental threats on the health of pregnant women and of children and families ¥ The availability of social services and other neighborhood supports Ensure Comprehensive Prenatal Care and Support The benefits of prenatal care, particularly in the first trimester, have been repeatedly documented: women who receive a full course of such care stand a much better chance of delivering healthy, full-term, normal-weight babies than women who do not. More than physical health is at stake during the prenatal period. An infant's capacity for learning in the critical years following birth is intimately tied to brain development in utero and thus to the prenatal environment that the mother provides. Research shows that for every instance of low birthweight averted by earlier and more frequent prenatal care, the U.S. health care system saves between $14,000 and $30,000. But the evidence is also mounting that millions of American children are coming into the world without benefit of this care, and their numbers are increasing: ¥About one-fourth of pregnant women do not receive the recommended level of prenatal care. ¥ The percentage of pregnant women who receive virtually no prenatal care has increased in recent years. ¥ Mothers are less likely to obtain adequate or prompt prenatal care if they are young, poor, unmarried, relatively uneducated, uninsured, or living in inner cities or rural areas. The task force recommends that all pregnant women have universal access to comprehensive prenatal care as a core component of any health care reform package that this nation adopts. The task force concurs that all pregnant women must be drawn, early in pregnancy, into comprehensive prenatal care that includes at least four components: ¥ Early and continuing risk assessment ¥ Health education and promotion ¥ Medical and social support services ¥ Medical treatment for existing conditions Meeting this goal requires the intensification of national, state, and local efforts to improve the availability and use of prenatal services. Specifically we recommend the removal of the barriers that now stop women from receiving comprehensive prenatal care, including inadequate financing, the absence of local services, cultural and language barriers, and the lack of child care, transportation, and translation services. Provide Opportunities for Parent Education and Support No job is more important to our nation's future than that of a parent, and no job is more challenging. But while society readily acknowledges the value of job training in other areas, it tends to act as if parenting skills should come naturally. The task force notes that many parents could benefit from parent education and support--especially parents of infants and toddlers. Even in the best of circumstances, the newness of the parental role, coupled with the child's rapid physical, intellectual, and emotional development, make the parents' job demanding and at times overwhelming. As a result, parent education and support programs have appeared, ranging from grassroots, community-based efforts staffed with volunteers to statewide programs that are available on a universal and voluntary basis. Families vary tremendously in their structure, values, needs, and resources, as well as in their ability to seek and use parent education and support. Still, certain key elements define successful parent education and support. Successful programs ¥ Establish an ongoing relationship with parents ¥ Are geared to the strengths, styles, and needs of individual families ¥ Increase understanding of child development and parent -child relationships ¥ Provide models of parenting ¥ Teach new parenting skills ¥ Provide a network of social support with other parents ¥ Facilitate access to community resources The task force finds that parent education and support can be effective. A variety of programs have been found to have consistent and persistent influence on both parental behavior and the intellectual development of the young children. At the same time, we recognize that families with high levels of stress and severe economic hardship have urgent needs that clearly cannot be met through education alone. To serve these families, parent education and support programs must be built into a coordinated array of services such as health care, child care, literacy classes, and job training. Some communities have formed coalitions to coordinate services. Appropriate staffing and training are key to successful parent education and support programs. Many programs enthusiastically recruit local community members as key staff contacts with parents. This approach has the advantages of providing training and employment for members of the community, drawing on the insights of people who have lived in similar social situations, and avoiding disparities in culture, language, and values between clients and practitioners. The task force recommends that parent education and support, an effective preventive strategy, be made available on a voluntary basis to all parents with children under age three. The task force encourages all states and communities to use funds from existing sources and from new sources, such as the federal Family Preservation and Support Service Program, to initiate and expand community-based parent education and support programs for families with infants and toddlers. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Copyright(c) 1994 by Carnegie Corporation of New York. All rights reserved. Material is used with the permission of Carnegie Corporation of New York. downloaded at www.schoolhousedoor.com