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The Crying Clinic: Increasing accessibility to Infant Mental Health services for immigrant parents at risk for peripartum depression

ABSTRACT Peripartum depression (PPD) is considered a major public health concern due to its profound impact on families, including infants. In this paper, we report on a pilot initiative designed to reduce barriers and stigma related to the use of traditional infant mental health services for immigr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Infant mental health journal 2021-01, Vol.42 (1), p.140-156
Main Authors: Bohr, Y., Bimm, M., Bint Misbah, K., Perrier, R., Lee, Y., Armour, L., Sockett‐DiMarco, N.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:ABSTRACT Peripartum depression (PPD) is considered a major public health concern due to its profound impact on families, including infants. In this paper, we report on a pilot initiative designed to reduce barriers and stigma related to the use of traditional infant mental health services for immigrant parents deemed at high risk of PPD. The Crying Clinic (CC) is an innovative walk‐in service offered in a culturally diverse Canadian community to support maternal well‐being and healthy parent–infant relationships. The CC was designed to be a gateway to existing infant mental health services, through its emphasis on accessibility and cultural sensitivity. Support for concrete concerns, such as anxiety about normative infant behaviors like crying, is underscored in this approach to attract vulnerable families who would otherwise not access mental health support. A review of 44 users, utilization, plans for the use of additional services, and client evaluations suggests that the CC accomplished most of its goals. We conclude that gateway service models such as the CC have the potential to enhance traditional infant mental health programs by creatively addressing the challenge of engaging highly vulnerable parents from culturally diverse backgrounds. RESUMEN La depresión durante el período inmediatamente antes, durante e inmediatamente después del parto, o peri‐parto (PPD) es considerada una preocupación seria de la salud pública debido a su profundo impacto en las familias, incluyendo los infantes (v.g., Howard, Piot y Stein, 2014). En este ensayo, reportamos acerca de una iniciativa experimental diseñada para reducir barreras y el estigma relacionado con el uso de los servicios tradicionales de salud mental infantil por parte de progenitores inmigrantes a quienes se les considera como de alto riesgo con respecto al PPD. La Clínica del Llanto ‐The Crying Clinic – (CC) en un innovador servicio al que se puede recurrir sin cita previa y que se ofrece en una comunidad canadiense culturalmente diversa con el fin de apoyar el bienestar materno y las saludables relaciones progenitor‐infante. La CC fue diseñada para ser una puerta de entrada a los servicios de salud mental infantil existentes, por medio de enfatizar la accesibilidad y la sensibilidad cultural. El apoyo a preocupaciones concretas, tales como la ansiedad acerca de las conductas normativas del infante ‐el llanto, por ejemplo‐ es recalcado por medio de este acercamiento para atraer a familias vulnerables
ISSN:0163-9641
1097-0355
DOI:10.1002/imhj.21879