Supporting new parents through adversity – part two
Episode 60, Nov 13, 2023, 10:25 AM
Part two of a podcast discussion about how therapeutic and trauma-informed early intervention services can support families through adversity and give children and young people the best start in life.
The first 1001 days of a child’s life are crucial for their development and wellbeing. Having access to caring relationships and support networks can help a child’s brain develop in a healthy way.
New parents who experience adversity, such as domestic abuse, may need additional help to build these support networks for their child.
This is the second half of a two-part podcast discussion focusing on For Baby’s Sake, a service which provides therapeutic and trauma-informed support to expectant parents who have experienced domestic abuse.
You'll hear from Ged Docherty, a Team Manager at For Baby’s Sake Blackpool, and Colin Smy, Development Manager at Blackpool Better Start. In this half of the discussion, Colin and Ged will talk about why it's so important to involve fathers in early intervention, and how service practitioners can engage fathers in their services.
If you haven't done so already, you can listen to part one here.
You can read this episode’s transcript on the NSPCC Learning website.
💬 About the speakers
Colin Smy is Development Manager at Blackpool Better Start. Blackpool Better Start is a 10-year National Lottery funded programme to transform services in the town and change childhoods through lived experience, science, and evidence. The Centre for Early Child Development is the research and development hub of Blackpool Better Start, and provides a whole systems approach to delivering universal services, early help, and specialist support.
Ged Docherty is Team Manager at For Baby’s Sake. For Baby’s Sake is a programme for expectant parents that takes a whole-family approach, starting in pregnancy and dealing with the entire cycle and history of domestic abuse, identifying and directly addressing the trauma or traumas that lie at the heart of the problem.
📚 Related resources
> Find out more about For Baby’s Sake
> Find out more about Blackpool Better Start
> Learn more about how childhood trauma affects child brain development
> Take the NSPCC’s elearning course on trauma and child brain development
> Take the NSPCC’s safeguarding elearning course for anyone working with under 1s and families in the antenatal or postnatal period
Intro/outro music is Lights by Sappheiros
New parents who experience adversity, such as domestic abuse, may need additional help to build these support networks for their child.
This is the second half of a two-part podcast discussion focusing on For Baby’s Sake, a service which provides therapeutic and trauma-informed support to expectant parents who have experienced domestic abuse.
You'll hear from Ged Docherty, a Team Manager at For Baby’s Sake Blackpool, and Colin Smy, Development Manager at Blackpool Better Start. In this half of the discussion, Colin and Ged will talk about why it's so important to involve fathers in early intervention, and how service practitioners can engage fathers in their services.
If you haven't done so already, you can listen to part one here.
You can read this episode’s transcript on the NSPCC Learning website.
💬 About the speakers
Colin Smy is Development Manager at Blackpool Better Start. Blackpool Better Start is a 10-year National Lottery funded programme to transform services in the town and change childhoods through lived experience, science, and evidence. The Centre for Early Child Development is the research and development hub of Blackpool Better Start, and provides a whole systems approach to delivering universal services, early help, and specialist support.
Ged Docherty is Team Manager at For Baby’s Sake. For Baby’s Sake is a programme for expectant parents that takes a whole-family approach, starting in pregnancy and dealing with the entire cycle and history of domestic abuse, identifying and directly addressing the trauma or traumas that lie at the heart of the problem.
📚 Related resources
> Find out more about For Baby’s Sake
> Find out more about Blackpool Better Start
> Learn more about how childhood trauma affects child brain development
> Take the NSPCC’s elearning course on trauma and child brain development
> Take the NSPCC’s safeguarding elearning course for anyone working with under 1s and families in the antenatal or postnatal period
Intro/outro music is Lights by Sappheiros