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Early Childhood Developmental Health Systems (ECDHS): Evidence to Impact is sponsored by Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). This program aims to advance statewide systems of comprehensive early childhood developmental promotion, screenings, and interventions that improve outcomes and reduce disparities in early developmental health and family well-being for communities with high levels of childhood p…
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Developmental Health Systems: Evidence to Impact Early Childhood Developmental Health Systems (ECDHS): Evidence to Impact Center Building early childhood systems that work to secure the health and well-being of young children and their families. Babies and toddlers need a variety of supports to flourish, yet families often do not receive the services they need, when they need them.
The Early Childhood Developmental Health Systems (ECDHS): Evidence to Impact Center is a program focused on building early childhood systems to improve and strengthen the health and well-being of babies and toddlers.
Early childhood developmental health systems play a critical role in ensuring that families receive care by bringing together maternal and child health, early care and education, child welfare, and other human services and family support programs.
The ECDHS: Evidence to Impact Center envisions a future in which states and communities have a comprehensive early childhood developmental health system that effectively supports all families with young children to receive the services they need to thrive. Strengthen state ECD systems data. Accelerate ECD systems development.
Increase systems-building skills and the number of early childhood and health system leaders. Advance the delivery of high-quality ECD promotion and support services in pediatric settings in support of the Transforming Pediatrics for Early Childhood (TPEC) program.
The ECDHS: Evidence to Impact Center is supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) and is a partnership of ZERO TO THREE, the American Academy of Pediatrics and Help Me Grow National Center, with the Center for the Study of Social Policy, Family Voices, James Bell Associates, and Thrive Center for Children, Families, and Communities at Georgetown University.
Together, we are creating a future where all families with young children flourish. An early childhood developmental health system is an organized group of partners and organizations within a state or community working to bring together critical early childhood and family support services.
Early childhood systems are complex, and the implementation of new changes or investments in a state’s early childhood system’s operations and infrastructure takes time and commitment.
The ECDHS: Evidence to Impact Center helps states and communities improve the six enabling, foundational system conditions that produce measurable impact and can be sustained over time: policies, practices, resource flows, relationships and connections, power dynamics, and mental models. Source: Kania, J. , Kramer, M.
, Senge, P. (2018). The Waters of Systems Change.
Explore the Center’s Resources, Events, and More ECDHS: Evidence to Impact Center One-Pager Engaging Families in Policy Change Families’ lived experience gives them critical expertise in the services and support they need for their children to thrive.
Strengthening Connections: State Approaches to Connecting Families to Services Better Outcomes for Babies: Key Practices of Cross-System Collaboration Enter your email to receive the latest information from the ECDHS: Evidence to Impact Center, including a quarterly newsletter. Join us to build a world where all babies can thrive.
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Current Health Center Program operational grant (H80) award recipients are eligible for ECD funding. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Early Childhood Developmental Health Systems (ECDHS): Evidence to Impact is funded by Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Yes — this listing is flagged as national in scope, so applicants across the U.S. may apply, subject to the sponsor's other eligibility criteria.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
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