The period from conception to age 5 is a critical window to act to prevent mental illness and ensure that all children can achieve optimal developmental outcomes.
By examining and acting on modifiable early life mechanisms of risk and resilience, our aim is to improve children’s long-term mental health trajectories and neurodevelopment.
Our Key Objectives
Understanding the origins of neurodevelopmental risk and resilience
It is vital that we develop a deeper understanding of the interactions between the biological and psychosocial mechanisms implicated in mental health and illness in order to promote positive mental health and neurodevelopment, and to improve identification, prevention, and management of adverse outcomes. Our research aims to further our understanding of the biological pathways implicated in neurodevelopment and mental health vulnerability and resilience, highlighting opportunities for identification of risk, as well as generating potential targets for early intervention programs.
Developing and testing prevention and pre-emptive intervention approaches to reduce the impact of developmental vulnerability and prevent childhood mental illness
This involves working with community members and partners to develop novel intervention approaches, test their feasibility and efficacy, and understand the barriers and facilitators for implementation at the population level. It is our strong belief that effective intervention development is grounded in consumer involvement and community partnership, and we seek to ensure that all work undertaken by the team is co-developed with members of the communities we aim to support.
Promote more equitable outcomes in early childhood neurodevelopment and mental health
Social disadvantage is a global public health issue. There is a marked social gradient in early childhood development, with socially disadvantaged children twice as likely to be developmentally vulnerable at school entry. This, in turn, leads to poorer social-emotional and mental health outcomes in later life that can perpetuate cycles of disadvantage. Our team’s work aims to understand how environments marked by disadvantage influence developmental risk and resilience. Additionally, our uses economic frameworks to determine the return-on-investment of early identification and intervention approaches and to understand how best to conceptualise and achieve equity in child health.
Our Partners
We partner with the Institute for Innovation in Developmental Sciences at Northwestern University, as well as a range of other national and international collaborators. Locally, we work closely with key stakeholders in early child development, including Child and Adolescent Health Services – Community Health, Ngala, Anglicare, and the Department of Communities.
Team leader
BPsych(Hons), MPsych(Clinical), MHealthEcon, PhD (Clin Psych)
Team members (17)
BSc, MSc, PhD
Postdoctoral Researcher
BSc Nursing, Grad Cert Clinical Nursing, M Mental Health Nursing
Research Assistant
BPsych (Hons)
Research Assistant
BPsych (Hons)
Research Assistant and PhD Student
BSc (Hons), BA
PhD Student
Bsc (Hons), GradDipPsych(Adv)
PhD Student
BPsych, PhD
BSc, BPsych (Hons)
PhD Candidate
Research Assistant
Research Assistant
Research Assistant, Community Engagement
BSc (Hons)
Lauren Wakschlag
Honorary
Featured projects
Identify and Act
Mental health problems are the most prevalent and expensive chronic condition affecting children.
September 2022
ORIGINS of Neurodevelopmental Risk and Resilience
This project aims to better understand the early genetic and environmental factors that the developing brain during a child’s first five years of life.
Other projects
STEPS - Equitable Approach to Early Self-Regulation Promotion Global Scales for Early Development: Piloting the Family Check Up Program SMS4Dads Supporting parents with young children to create healthy screen time behaviours Development and Validation of a Beliefs and Concerns about Screentime Scale Child Development Services: What Matters To You? All Early Neurodevelopment and Mental Health projects