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Infant Mental Health: Developing Positive Early Attachments

Infant Mental Health: Developing Positive Early Attachments

Overview

Level: Informed

Impact Assessments:

The aims of this elearning module are to:

  • raise awareness, knowledge, and confidence among a range of professionals and people who work with young children and families
  • to provide a starting point for health and other professionals in Scotland to develop their knowledge about and confidence in supporting families to promote positive infant mental health and develop secure early attachment relationships

E-learning modules on Turas.

Is there a cost for this learning resource? :

No

Has this resource been accredited or endorsed by any organisation? :

NHS Education for Scotland (NES)

Training model:

The module can be accessed by anyone. It is aimed at professionals and people who work with young children and families. This includes: alternative caregivers, family support workers, social workers, nursery nurses, early years educators and support workers, teachers, health visitors, neonatal nurses, children’s nurses, midwives, family nurse partnership nurses, allied Health professionals working with young children, paediatricians, psychologists, mental health teams, support workers and students of all these professions.

Staff capacity and time commitment:

Approximately 2 – 4 hours of practitioner time is required to complete the module.

Author/developer:

NHS Education for Scotland (NES)

Contact for Further Development

Further information is hosted on here: Infant Mental Health: Developing Positive Early Attachments

Link to resource


Quality dimensions

Usability

The module lists what the intended learning outcomes are and highlights that after completing the resource and undertaking other learning signposted in the resource, learners will be able to:

After completing the resource and undertaking other learning signposted in the resource, learners will be able to:

Describe and define infant mental health and attachment relationships

Discuss factors that shape and influence the development of infant mental health and early relationships

Describe a range of approaches to promote the development of positive relationships and to observe and identify indications that the attachment is meeting the infant’s needs

Recognise developing problems with attachment and instigate appropriate responses to address them

Describe their particular roles in infant mental health and promotion of positive relationships and how this fits within the wider health and social care system

Link their learning about infant mental health with implementation of current Scottish policy, including the Children and Young People (Scotland) Act 2014 and the principles of GIRFEC and the National Practice Model, the Voice of the Infant: Best Practice Guidelines and Infant Pledge, and the UNCRC United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (Incorporation) (Scotland) Act 2024.

The training resource is in a fixed form of an e-learning module.

Supports

Supports - Workforce

Learners will require sufficient time to complete the resource and any additional reading.

Supports - Technology

An internet enabled device is required to access the resource.

Supports - Administrative

Non required

Supports - Financial

Non required

Evidence base

The resource focuses on increasing knowledge and understanding of infant mental health at the informed level. It aims to provide practitioners with a starting point for learning about this topic by presenting some of the key facts and principles and then signposting to other high-quality evidence-based learning. The resource links to the realities of working with families, with the aim of practitioners feeling equipped in their everyday work to promote positive infant mental health and early relationships. A wide range of research, theories and knowledge informed the development of the resource and is contained in the reference section of the resource.


Impact assessments

Reaction

Feedback from the learner is requested following completion of the module.

Learning

Within the module, knowledge checks are completed.

Behaviour

Not collected

Results

Not collected


KSF dimension information in relation to the learning resource

Child Development and Attachment

Mental Health in Children, Young People and their Families

Engagement, Containment and Communication

Identification and Understanding of Need

Supports and Interventions

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