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Pediatric Partnerships So Every Child Can Thrive

Mental Health, Earlier Center

Announcement: MHE Center Pilot Project Awards Program Request for Application FY26 Now Open!

We invite proposals for innovative pilot studies focused on improving early identification, risk communication, evidence‑based interventions, and implementation strategies to prevent emergent mental health concerns in toddlers and preschoolers. Applicants must obtain prior approval to submit by March 15, 2026, and full applications will be accepted until April 15, 2026

Details and the full RFA are attached on our Seed Projects Page; inquiries may be directed to mhecenter@northwestern.edu. 

Our Goal

The Mental Health, Earlier (MHE) Center aims to help pediatric clinicians identify "when to worry" about toddler emotions and behavior and "when to act" by identifying risk in routine primary care and connecting at risk toddlers and families to effective intervention.

The Center will: (a) train clinicians to communicate compassionately with families about their toddlers' mental health, (b) prepare an evidence-based, developmentally meaningful tool for use during routine check-ups, (c) create an open-access toolkit with interventions for pediatric clinicians and communities to promote early mental health as part of routine pediatric care, and (d) support future research and clinical leaders in early mental health promotion through training and funding for pilot studies.

The Challenge

Toddlerhood is a time of tremendous developmental growth. Some toddlers between 24- and 30-months may start to struggle with managing their emotions and behavior. Catching and preventing these early warning signs during well child visits is key to help prevent future mental health diagnoses. However, there are currently no standardized tools for pediatric providers to assess these behaviors, to determine risk, or to recommend timely caregiver support.

Our Partners

The Center is funded by the National Institute of Mental Health. Led by researchers from Northwestern University & University of Utah, the MHE Center collaborates with scientists nationwide (Lurie Chidren's Hospital, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, Arizona State University, San Diego State University). Thus far our work is implemented in pediatric primary care sites at Nemours Children’s Health.

We prioritize partnerships with participating communities. The Center is guided by two advisory boards of caregivers (Caregiver Collaboratives) and clinicians (Community Practice Board).

MHE Center Research

The MHE Center is conducting four interconnected studies to develop  (1) tools that support clinicians in “catching and preventing” early mental health risk in toddlers and  (2) interventions that work to support all families to manage those risks:

Peds-BRITE (Pediatricians Building Resilience through Early Identification for Toddler Well-Being): 

Tests the Developmental Early Childhood Instrument for Deciding Effectively about Mental Health (DECIDE) Tool to identify toddler mental health risks and connect families to Family-Check Up® Online, a telehealth parenting coaching intervention.

Peds-BRITE

TEAM4Access (Talking Early About Mental Health for Access):

Provides digital training for clinicians to support culturally sensitive communication and shared decision making about toddler mental health with families.

TEAM4Access

Project SPARK (Supporting Parent Action for Resilient Kids):

Delivers a digital intervention to help families connect and engage with mental health services.

Project SPARK

REACH4MHE (Researching Ethics and Assessment of Unintended Consequences in Healthcare):

Evaluates potential unanticipated consequences of interventions to ensure effective design.

REACH4MHE
For any questions or concerns, please contact mhecenter@northwestern.edu.