Poverty policies don’t work

Henry Hepburn
Published: 09 May 2008

Fix ‘broken kids’ in the early years, urges leading Government adviser

Scotland’s chief medical officer has issued an urgent wake-up call for a change of direction in policies to support children in the first years of their lives.

Improving the early experiences of children through individual support rather than “broad” approaches to poverty was the key to helping children at risk, Harry Burns told Catholic secondary heads at their annual conference in Crieff last week.

Dr Burns went so far as to suggest that a more important factor than poor health and poverty in the way children developed was whether they were able to take charge of their surroundings.

“A complete inability to control your environment is really damaging, not just psychologically, but physiologically,” he commented.

Dr Burns said there was even evidence that the brain became “wired up differently”. Contrasting scans of two three-year-old children showed that the brain of the child who had experienced more stressful conditions was smaller.

He underlined the importance of early support by pointing out that children who are likely to commit murder or other serious crimes could often be picked out at a very early age, even by other children.

Dr Burns claimed that “broad processes”, focusing on issues such as poverty, drugs and alcohol, had proved relatively ineffective; improvements to housing in Glasgow’s Castlemilk estate, for example, had not improved health.

“If we are really going to make a long-term difference to health, we’ve got to start supporting children most at risk, and it’s got to be done on an individual basis.”

Read more in this week's TESS, out Friday May 9



 



     

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