Abstract
Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health Consultation (IECMHC) aims to improve early childhood professionals’ abilities to promote children’s mental health through relationship building and collaboration. Using a longitudinal, matched-comparison group design, a 3-year pilot study of a cross-system, embedded model of IECMHC assessed teachers and home visitors in intervention and comparison programs in reflective capacity, burnout, and perceptions of children’s behavior. A sample of 136 staff (n = 72 intervention group; n = 64 comparison group; 21% Black; 51% White; 28% Latina/Hispanic) participated in surveys over a 21-month implementation period. A subsample of staff (n = 26) participated in interviews that included a narrative measure of reflective capacity; and a smaller subsample of teachers only (n = 21) completed assessments of children. Staff in the intervention group significantly increased reflective capacity after 21 months. For the staff interview subsample, receiving the intervention predicted lower levels of burnout at 12–15 months post-baseline. Among teachers completing child assessments, those with higher reflective capacity rated children’s behaviors more positively than teachers with lower reflective capacity. We conclude that this IECMHC model successfully improved reflective capacity in staff. Future research should investigate reflective capacity as a potential mechanism of change for IECMHC.