Childhood health equity: The urgent need to do things differently – now
Skouteris
Despite years of research, discussions and advocacy in relation to nurturing children’s development through healthy eating and active living, there’s been very little in the way of progress – sugary drinks are still advertised prolifically, there’s hidden salt and sugar in foods, and most kids spend more time in front of screens rather than outside.
It's time for the chatter to stop, and for effective interventions to be put in place.
Why? Because fostering the growth, development, health and wellbeing of children is a global priority, and the early childhood period presents a critical window to influence lifelong trajectories.
The formative years from conception to age five (also known as the first 2000 days) provide multiple teachable “moments” for both the child and their family to establish and reinforce healthy lifestyle behaviours that can persist throughout childhood, and into adolescence and adulthood.
Recently, Dr Rachael Green and I formed the International Healthy Eating Active Living Matters (HEALing Matters) Alliance, a global network of academics, practitioners, and policymakers working across child health and development, with the goal of improving health equity for children and their families. We recently published a policy paper in the journal, Health and Social Care in the Community.
Our alliance goal is aligned with the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development – released by the United Nations in 2015 – aiming for all children to have the best start in life, irrespective of where they’re born, their ethnicity, and cultural heritage.
Unfortunately, the pursuit of this goal has been siloed across community, health, and education sectors in different countries and regions, leading to a fractured response at best, with many families and their children falling through the cracks.
Essential to achieving the best start in life for all children is a focus on supporting families to nurture their young children’s growth and development through healthy eating and active living within the context of responsive caregiving, safety and security, and opportunities for early learning.
In The Lancet 2017 series on Advancing Early Childhood Development, the absence of nurturing care was identified as a primary reason why children don’t thrive. This is often the result of structural disadvantage, not individual choice, reinforcing the need to address the underlying social and physical conditions that prevent parents and families from providing nurturing care.
The COVID-19 impact
Globally, the COVID-19 pandemic exposed and highlighted the structural drivers of health inequalities, and exacerbated existing social vulnerabilities.
As such, the need to do things differently is now urgent. Here lies a window of opportunity for all governments to facilitate collective action through the co-design and delivery of programs and services that foster the strengths and resilience of children, families and communities across the first 2000 days.
The development of initiatives in active consultation and engagement with the community will ensure they’re relevant to the needs of the target population.
We also recommend that financial investment is made by all governments to ameliorate poverty, income inequality, and food insecurity associated with racial inequality, and that we must transform the way we work together for better child outcomes.
The alliance brings together the world’s best minds in the fields of child growth (operationalised as healthy weight gain from birth to age five) and development, and implementation science.
Rather than knowing the “what” alone about child disadvantage, we also need to know the “how” we can best work together to support early child growth and development.
Working towards a holistic approach
Knowing how to best work together necessarily means understanding how health, social care/community services and early childhood education organisations can advance and resource a holistic, person-centred approach to support and enable parents to nurture their children’s development through healthy eating and active living in a collaborative, multi-sectoral way.
These are the sectors that have the most contact with children and families from pregnancy to age five years. To achieve this collective action, we need systems change driven by advanced, theoretically-informed implementation science.
With the goal of breaking down silos and offering a more coordinated approach, we argue that nurturing children’s development through healthy eating and active living in the context of responsive emotional support, safety, and early learning must occur through multi-sectoral collaborations that foster positive developmental trajectories by mitigating adversities when necessary.
And we argue the time to act genuinely and effectively, to ensure all children have the best start in life, is now.
About the Authors
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Helen skouteris
Monash Warwick Alliance Joint Professor of Health and Social Care Improvement and Implementation Science
Head of the Health and Social Care Unit, and Co-Lead of the Division of Evidence Synthesis, Qualitative and Implementation Methods, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University. Helen is also Director of the National Health and Medical Research Council Centre of Research Excellence in Health in Preconception and Pregnancy (CRE HiPP 2020-2024). She has a strong track record in longitudinal multi-factorial research, randomised controlled trials, implementation research and higher degree research supervision. Her research since 2010 has been predominantly focused on building agency/capacity in the consumer to promote health and wellbeing across preconception, pregnancy, preschool, and childhood, including adolescence, to reduce the prevalence of obesity. Her work has also been focused extensively on social service and educational sector improvement that translates to better health outcomes for children, young people, adults and families and is critical to transforming policy across these sectors.
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Rachael green
Research Fellow, Health and Social Care Unit, Monash University
Rachael’s research focuses on implementing, translating and scaling an evidence-based healthy lifestyle intervention into changes in practice and policy to improve the health and wellbeing of young people living in out-of-home care.
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