Description
Book SynopsisThe past several decades have seen remarkable improvements in several major public health issues affecting young people: smoking rates are down, traffic crash fatalities have declined, and other unintentional injuries have declined in number. Yet, similar successes have not been replicated in mental health. Why are we, as a society, failing to make needed investments in children''s mental health? How can we ensure that programs with the highest levels of evidence and economic returns reach a larger fraction of the young people and families who could benefit from them?Investing in Children''s Mental Health investigates and addresses three interrelated questions:1) What are some of the best available investments to improve the mental health of children and adolescents in the United States? 2) To what extent are these investments being made? 3) What can practitioners, child-serving organizations, policymakers, and other stakeholders do to promote such investments? Daniel Eisenberg and Ram
Trade ReviewThe kids are not alright. In a historic moment of convergence, the U.S. Surgeon General has identified youth mental health as the 'defining public health crisis of our time' and supports for social emotional wellness stoke political debate in school board meetings. We need a practical path to assess, advance, and advocate for the most promising investments to help children and youth flourish. In this offering, Daniel Eisenberg and Ramesh Raghavan meet the moment with a multidisciplinary approach. As parents, policymakers, and child advocates we owe them a debt of gratitude for lighting a path to action and helping us return smiles to children's faces and spring to teenagers' steps." -Rev. Dr. Starsky Wilson, President & CEO, Children's Defense Fund
Investing in strategies that promote children's mental health is the most profitable choice that societies can make. In this highly engaging and readable book, Professors Eisenberg and Raghavan present a roadmap of why and how to make such investments, investments that I urge my fellow policymakers to support in order to better the lives of children within their countries and communities. * Ásmundur Einar Daðason, Minister of Education and Children, Government of Iceland *
Table of ContentsChapter 1: What Does It Mean to Invest in Children's Mental Health? Chapter 2: Overview of Current Evidence and Practice Chapter 3: Home Visiting Programs Chapter 4: Parent Training Programs Chapter 5: School-based Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) Programs Chapter 6: Multisystemic Therapy: The Fluorescent Light Bulb Not Everyone is Using Chapter 7: Communities that Care Chapter 8: Lessons Learned and Remaining Questions Chapter 9: A Path towards Better Investments Notes Index