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Child Development

 Legacy for Children™

Overview | Research Projects

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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has initiated Legacy for Children, a set of longitudinal, randomized, controlled studies examining the potential for improving child developmental outcomes through parenting programs designed to promote self-efficacy and a sense of community.

Legacy for ChildrenEvery Child Deserves a Chance
All children should have the opportunity to reach their full potential. Legacy for Children endeavors to promote optimal child outcomes by improving child development through promoting self-efficacy in parents. Parental self-efficacy helps parents understand that their behavior can positively influence the development of their children and give them the chance they truly deserve.

A Community That Cares
Parents do a better job of adopting and maintaining behaviors that enhance their child's development if they receive support for these behaviors from a peer group and have a sense of belonging to a community larger than themselves.

A Wise Investment
Investing in our children is investing in our future. Early childhood investment can reduce social costs, both tangible costs such as special education, foster care, welfare, medical care, law enforcement, social security and social services, and intangible costs such as physical and emotional pain experienced by children with developmental delays and their families.

Legacy for Children™
Research question
The primary research question for Legacy for Children is "do children in the parenting intervention groups achieve better developmental outcomes than do the children in the comparison groups?"

Theoretical Foundation & Legacy Philosophy
The early years of life (birth to age 5 years) are crucial in a child's development. Parents play a critical role in their children's development and are responsible for the environment in which they grow up. Past research shows that the personal characteristics of successful children consistently correlate to parental influences and behavior. Thus, the basis for the theoretical foundation is that parents can positively influence their child's development.

Research Design
Legacy has both a pilot phase and a main study phase. There are 180 intervention and 120 comparison families in the main study phase and 60 of each in the pilot phase at each study site, Miami and Los Angeles. The 720 participating families are those whose children, on average, would be expected to fall below national norms on a range of developmental outcomes. Process, cost, and short- and long-term outcome data are being collected.

Research Activities
Intervention activities are designed to enhance sensitive and responsive parenting, parent/child interaction, and promote a sense of community. Other activities include verbal and cognitive stimulation through parent and parent/child group meetings, visits to the home, and participation in community events.

The Future of Our Children
Legacy's desired long-term outcome is that children will have the capacity to be self-supporting and emotionally healthy in order to lead productive lives, and to become productive citizens.

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Date: September 20, 2005
Content source: National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities

 

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Topic Contents
 
 Positive Parenting Tips
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Infants (0-1 year old)

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Toddlers (1-2 years old)

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Toddlers (2-3 years old)

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Preschoolers (3-5 years old)

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Middle Childhood (6-8 years old)

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Middle Childhood (9-11 years old)

   arrow Early Adolescence (12-14 years old)
   arrow Middle Adolescence (15-17 years old)
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   arrow Developmental Screening
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 Resources
  
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Links to public health efforts to promote optimal child outcomes through federal sites
   
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Links to information and resources on child development and positive parenting.
   
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Links to information and resources on attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
 
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Quick Links
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ADHD

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Tourette Syndrome

  
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Report of the Surgeon General's Conference on Children's Mental Health: A National Action Agenda
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  arrow Publications Search
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Contact Info

Thank you for visiting the CDC-NCBDDD website. Click here to contact the National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities

We are not able to answer personal medical questions. Please see your health care provider concerning appropriate care, treatment, or other medical advice.
 

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Key Resources

Legacy for Children™

Pregnancy-Planning Education Program

Learn the Signs. Act Early.

Learn the Signs - Act Early
 
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National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities

National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities
 

 

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