The 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 childrens mental health? How can we ensure that programs with the highest levels of evidence and economic returnsreach a larger fraction of the young people and families who could benefit from them?Investing in Childrens 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 Ramesh Raghavan open with a broad synthesis of the latest researchand evidence, then introduce a series of case studies featuring interventions and programs spanning a variety of settings and age groups:: home visiting programs, parenting programs, social and emotional learning (SEL) programs in schools, multisystemic therapy (MST) for troubled youth, and the Communitiesthat Care framework for addressing youth substance use and wellbeing. The final sections distill key themes and offer recommendations for a range of stakeholders including policymakers, administrators, funders, and practitioners.By providing a road map to overcoming the barriers to progress for youth mental health, Investing in Childrens Mental Health will help push forward our societys thinking and actions regarding this ongoing population health concern.
Chapter 1: What Does It Mean to Invest in Childrens 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;
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