Reducing risk factors is essential to the healthy development of infant and toddlers.Children experiencing two risk factors were four times as likely to develop emotional and behavioral disorders compared to children not exposed to any risk factor or who were exposed to only one. Children with four risk factors were ten times more likely to develop emotional impairment than those with one or none. Risk factors included marital discord, economic hardships, large family size, parental criminality, parental psychiatric disorder, child welfare involvement, lack of prenatal care, substance abuse during pregnancy, poor temperamental fit between parent and child, substantiated abuse or neglect, and out of home placement.Protective experiences can balance risk factors caused by limited financial resources.
Key Takeaway
The single most common factor for children who develop resilience is at least one stable and committed relationship with a supportive parent, caregiver, or other adult. Resilience requires relationships.