Northwestern University has launched a new Mental Health, Earlier Center at the Institute for Innovations in Developmental Sciences (DevSci), thanks to an $11.7 million award from the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) of the National Institutes of Health.
Co-led by researchers at the Spencer Fox Eccles School of Medicine at the University of Utah, the center will address the youth mental health crisis by targeting early signs of vulnerability to mental health problems in toddlers through routine pediatric care — well before traditional mental health diagnoses or treatment commence.
Warning signs by age 3
Approximately 20% of children as young as age 3 have an identified mental health problem, according to the U.S. Surgeon General. Early warning signs prior to age 3 may mark the beginning of a negatively spiraling mental health course as children grow. But critically, these can also be reversed if addressed early with scientifically grounded developmental identification and prevention tools, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Pediatric primary care is the natural clinical setting for supporting young children’s mental health, as 95% of U.S. children see a pediatrician regularly. However, there are no widely established clinical standards to guide pediatricians in identifying when early emotional and behavioral struggles are more than typical growing pains. Supported by previous NIMH funding, scientists from the Mental Health, Earlier Center have created evidence-based developmental decision tools to determine “when to worry” about young children’s mental health. These tools, however, have not yet been adapted for integration into clinical care.
Strengthening the self-regulation muscles
“Mental health support at this young age means fostering toddlers’ self-regulation skills, like replacing frequent tantrums with more adaptive coping skills. When self-regulation ‘muscles’ are strong, mental health risk is reduced,” said developmental scientist Laurie Wakschlag, one of the center’s principal investigators, DevSci director and professor of medical social sciences at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
“Deploying this developmental health promotion framework to stave off mental health problems is non-stigmatizing, responsive to parental concerns, aligned with tenets of routine pediatric care, and sets a healthy social-emotional foundation for the life-course,” she said.
Adding mental health services to the routine checkup
DevSci is uniquely positioned to support this ambitious undertaking, according to Wakschlag, because its core mission is building bridges across disparate disciplines, universities and communities to accelerate the transfer of scientific knowledge to real world improvements in the health and wellbeing of children and families.
The Mental Health, Earlier Center will drive implementation strategies with community pediatric partners that support effective and practical mental health prevention services for diverse young children and families during routine pediatric well-checks. It will serve as a national resource for research on equitable implementation of early mental-health promotion in pediatric care. Robust partnerships with three diverse pediatric health systems — AllianceChicago, the Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital and Nemours Children’s Health — are a signature feature of the center.
Mental Health, Earlier Center is part of a national network
The Northwestern Mental Health, Earlier Center joins an NIMH network of Advanced Laboratories for Accelerating the Reach and Impact of Treatments for Youth and Adults with Mental Illness (ALACRITY) Research Centers. ALACRITY centers support innovative research ideas and collaborations across disciplines to transform the care of children, adolescents and adults with serious mental illnesses. Launched by the NIMH Division of Services and Intervention Research, the ALACRITY program supports more than a dozen mental health research centers nationally. Northwestern’s Mental Health, Earlier Center is the first of its kind targeting mental health prevention in early childhood in routine pediatric care.
“The launch of the Mental Health, Earlier Center exemplifies Northwestern’s mission to pursue groundbreaking research with the power to transform lives,” said Eric J. Perreault, vice president for research at Northwestern. “By addressing mental health vulnerabilities in young children before they escalate, this center takes an innovative, preventive approach that promotes healthy development while advancing equity in access to care. Northwestern is proud to be at the forefront of this critical research, working alongside community and clinical partners to create solutions that benefit children and families nationwide.”