Best Practice

Evidence and Impact: Improving infant mental health

5 mins read Families/Parenting Mental Health
The latest in a series of articles about emerging safeguarding practice looks at the development of an evidence-based approach to design systems and services to improve infant mental health.

The NSPCC works with children, young people and families who need help across the UK. Its services aim to protect children today, prevent abuse tomorrow and support wider efforts to make child cruelty a thing of the past. To improve understanding of best safeguarding practice, the NSPCC publishes evaluations of its services and interventions, and undertakes research and literature reviews. These are published on the NSPCC website (www.nspcc.org.uk/evidence) to contribute to the evidence on what works to protect children and families.

The first two years of a child's life are a particularly important developmental phase, primarily because of the impact of early parent-infant interaction on the infant's developing neurological and attachment systems. Children who grow up without positive and stable relationships are at greater risk of mental health problems.

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