Child First

Child First is a home-based, therapeutic intervention targeting young children at risk of emotional problems, developmental delay, and abuse and neglect.
The Child First model aims to bridge universal, targeted and specialist/intensive services to provide a tailored package of support to meet the unique needs of each family. Child First is delivered by two practitioners: one who connects families to community-based services as part of their family-driven plan and a qualified psychologist who provides home-visiting support.
Child First begins with a comprehensive needs assessment of each family’s specific strengths and weaknesses. Motivational interviewing is used during these first visits to actively engage and recruit parents to the programme. Practitioners also learn strategies for recruiting parents who initially refuse programme participation. Once the family and practitioners have agreed a plan, weekly home visits begin for a period of six to 12 months. Each visit lasts between 45 and 90 minutes, depending on the family’s needs and the number of family members present. During these sessions, family members typically receive Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP).
EIF Programme Assessment
Child outcomes
This programme can affect outcomes for children in Active and healthy, physical and mental wellbeing.
According to the best available evidence for this programme's impact, it can achieve the following positive outcomes for children:
Enhancing school achievement & employment
Improved language
based on study 1
- Statement: 22.80-percentage point decrease in proportion of participants with clinically concerning language problems on the Infant-Toddler Developmental Assessment
- Score: 31
- Timeframe: Immediately after the intervention
Preventing crime, violence and antisocial behaviour
Reduced behavioural problems
based on study 1
- Statement: 4.6-point improvement on the Infant-Toddler Social and Emotional Assessment (Externalising Scale)
- Score: 20
- Timeframe: Immediately after the intervention
This programme also has evidence of supporting positive outcomes for couples, parents or families that may be relevant to a commissioning decision. Please see About the evidence for more detail.
Who is it for?
The best available evidence for this programme relates to the following age-groups:
Infants Toddlers
How is it delivered?
The best available evidence for this programme relates to implementation through these delivery models:
- Home visiting
Where is it delivered?
The best available evidence for this programme relates to its implementation in these settings:
- Home
- Children's centre or early-years setting
How is it targeted?
The best available evidence for this programme relates to its implementation as:
- Targeted indicated
Where has it been implemented?
- United States
Ireland provision
Ireland evaluation
About the programme
What happens during the delivery?
How is it delivered?
- Child First is delivered to individual families in 55 sessions of 60 to 90 minutes’ duration each by one clinician with QCF-7/8 qualifications, and one care co-ordinator with QCF-6 level qualifications. Each receives a minimum of 12 days of programme training. Booster training of practitioners is recommended.
What happens during the intervention?
- Child First is delivered by a team of two practitioners: one who connects families to community-based services as part of their family-driven plan and a qualified, licensed mental health professional (often a masters' level social worker) who provides a two-generation, psychotherapeutic intervention.
- Practitioners are supported through supervision and training to recruit vulnerable parents to the programme and establish a positive working relationship. This training includes strategies for engaging parents who may be initially wary of programme participation.
- Child First begins with a comprehensive needs assessment of each family’s specific strengths and vulnerabilities that takes place through twice-weekly home visits involving both practitioners. During these visits, the practitioners work in partnership with the parents to determine a child and family plan of care, which identifies specific therapeutic goals and connections with community services. The plan is developed during twice-weekly home visits by both practitioners.
- Once the plan is determined, weekly home visits begin for a period of six to 18 months. Each visit lasts between 60 to 90 minutes, depending on the family’s needs and the number of family members present. During these sessions, family members typically receive trauma-informed infant/child/toddler psychotherapy (depending on the age of the child) from the mental health professional. Additional hands-on support is provided by the other practitioner who helps families connect with community services and offers general mentoring advice.
What are the implementation requirements?
Who can deliver it?
- The first practitioner that delivers the programme is a mental health/developmental clinician or mental health/child development clinician with NFQ-9/10 level qualifications. The second practitioner is a care coordinator with NFQ-7/8 level qualifications.
What are the training requirements?
- Both practitioners receive a minimum of 12 days in-person training as part of a year-long Learning Collaborative (LC): two to three days' training on the Child First electronic client record, distance learning modules between the four LC sessions, and eight days of Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP) training. Booster training of practitioners is recommended.
How are the practitioners supervised?
- It is recommended that practitioners are supervised by one host agency supervisor and a programme developer supervisor (both qualified to NFQ-9/10 level).
What are the systems for maintaining fidelity?
- Training manual
- Other printed material
- Other online material
- Video or DVD training
- Face-to-face training
- Supervision
- Accreditation or certification process
- Booster training
- Fidelity monitoring
- Chart review
Is there a licensing requirement?
There is a licence required to run this programme.
How does it work? (Theory of Change)
How does it work?
- Positive and sensitive parent/child interactions during the first years of life lays the foundation for young children’s cognitive and social/emotional development.
- Parents experiencing multiple hardships and psycho-social stress are more likely to have difficulty responding positively and appropriately to their children.
- Child First provides parents with a system care to reduce the psychosocial stress they may be experiencing.
- Parents also receive therapeutic support that improves their ability to form positive representations of their child and provide an appropriately nurturing and sensitive caregiving environment.
- In the short term, parents experience less stress and learn parenting strategies to support their children’s early attachment security, social/emotional development and language acquisition.
- In the longer term, children will demonstrate increased school readiness and reduced risk of negative outcomes, including child maltreatment.
Intended outcomes
Contact details
Mary Peniston
Child First
www.childfirst.org
http://homvee.acf.hhs.gov/
http://www.blueprintsprograms.com/factsheet/child-first
About the evidence
Child FIRST’s (Child and Family Interagency, Resource, Support, and Training) most rigorous evidence comes from an RCT which was conducted in the USA.
This study identified statistically significant positive impact on a number of child and parent outcomes.
This programme is underpinned by one study with a Level 3 rating, hence the programme receives a Level 3rating overall.
Study 1
Citation: | Lowell et al (2011) |
Design: | RCT |
Country: | United States |
Sample: | 157 multi-risk urban mothers and children (between 6 and 36 months old) |
Timing: | Post-test |
Child outcomes: |
|
Other outcomes: |
|
Study rating: | 3 |
Crusto, C., Lowell, L., Paulicin, B., Reynolds, J., Feinn, R., Friedman, S., & Kaufman, J. (2008). Evaluation of a wraparound process for children exposed to family violence. Best Practices in Mental Health, 4, 1-16.
Available at
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/lyceum/bpmh/2008/00000004/
00000001/
art00002?crawler=true
Study design and sample
The first study is a rigorously conducted RCT.
This study involved random assignment of families to a Child FIRST treatment group and families to standard care as control group.
This study was conducted in the USA, with a sample of 157 multi-risk families with a child between the ages of 6 to 36 months. The mother’s age ranged from 17 to 47 years and the household size ranged from 2 to 11 people.
Measures
Child language status was measured using the Infant-Toddler Developmental Assessment (IDA) (direct assessment). Child social-emotional/behavioural problems were measured using the Infant-Toddler Social and Emotional Assessment (ITSEA) (direct assessment).
Parental global psychiatric symptoms were measured using the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) (parent report). Parental depressive symptoms were assessed using the Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) (parent report). Parental distress, difficult child, and parent-child dysfunctional interaction were measured using the Parent Stress Inventory (PSI) Short Form (parent report).
Findings
This study identified statistically significant positive impact on a number of child and parent outcomes.
The child outcomes include:
- Improved language
- Reduced behavioural problems