This year’s International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination highlights 60 years of global action

The 2025 International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination marks the 60th anniversary of an important human rights treaty — the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD). Adopted by the United Nations (UN) in 1965, the ICERD was the first of the UN’s core human rights treaties. It set the stage for future human rights advances and underpins the ongoing global fight against racism and discrimination.

As part of their work under the ICERD, the United Nations designated March 21 as the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. The day commemorates the Sharpeville Massacre, in which police in South Africa opened fire on a peaceful demonstration against apartheid “pass laws,” killing 69 people.

This year’s observance offers an opportunity to celebrate progress made under the ICERD. But it also highlights the work still needed to create a world free from racial discrimination.

Though antiracism efforts must focus on adults, from whom children learn their early beliefs and behaviours, childhood interventions can also be a starting point. A systematic review undertaken by the Children’s Health Policy Centre identified two interventions that reduced racist attitudes. To learn more, see Vol. 15, No. 3 of the Children’s Mental Health Research Quarterly.

Addressing common risk factors can help safeguard children’s mental health

Research has identified several modifiable risk factors that increase the likelihood of children developing multiple disorders. For example, common risk factors for both anxiety and depression include challenges with regulating emotions and with experiencing negative emotions such as anger and guilt on a frequent basis. As well, limited parent involvement and support play a role in the development of behaviour and substance use problems. Notably, experiencing avoidable childhood adversities, including maltreatment, is a risk factor for several disorders.

These research findings support the development of interventions to address common risk factors underlying multiple disorders — programs collectively termed transdiagnostic prevention programs. When successful, these interventions have several potential advantages over those that address single disorders only. They can provide a greater range of benefits while simultaneously simplifying training and implementation. As well, they have the potential to reduce mental health service shortfalls and reduce delivery costs.

For more information, see Vol. 17, No. 2 of the Children’s Mental Health Research Quarterly.

CBC Health highlights the CHPC’s call for investment in drug prevention programs

Funding effective prevention programs could significantly reduce youth drug use — that was the message shared by Adjunct Professor with the Children’s Health Policy Centre Christine Schwartz in an article published last week by CBC Health’s Second Opinion.

The article featured new research evidence showing that PreVenture, a school-based program developed by a researcher at the University of Montréal, produced a 35% reduction in the annual increase in the odds of teens developing substance use disorder, compared to a control group.

The piece also highlighted the need for sustained government funding to support and deliver programs such as PreVenture in schools across Canada.

Schwartz noted in her interview with CBC Health that policymakers are “increasingly turning to the research evidence” to evaluate drug prevention programs — and a growing body of evidence demonstrates the effectiveness of several prevention programs.

Second Opinion shared the link to a recent edition of The Children’s Mental Health Research Quarterly in which the CHPC presented findings from an evaluation of two such programs: Strengthening Families and Project PATHS. The CHPC team found that they were not only successful in reducing opioid misuse, but that they also reached large numbers of young people, highlighting the benefits of school delivery.

The missing piece, Schwartz told CBC Health, is funding to maintain these programs and put them in place more widely. But she is optimistic that the CHPC’s prevention-focused message will continue to reach policymakers and shape the national dialogue on youth substance use.

“It’s great to see this evidence on the effectiveness of school-based prevention programs being shared in national media,” she says. “These programs increase the likelihood that young people can lead happy, healthy lives and make it less likely they will suffer harms from substance use later on. This is a conversation we need to be having as a country, and one I’m sure policymakers will be paying close attention to.”

Preventing Problematic Anxiety Throughout Childhood

  • How can we prevent problematic anxiety throughout childhood? This presentation from February 2025 looks at what puts children and youth at risk for developing anxiety disorders and identifies steps to help lessen those risks. It also reviews the effectiveness of several programs designed to prevent these disorders.

Children often struggle with more than a single mental disorder

Mental disorders cause substantial distress for children, and for their families. They also constitute one of the leading causes of childhood disability globally. Compounding the challenges, among children who meet diagnostic criteria for one disorder, 26.5% meet criteria for two or more.

Beyond prioritizing the prevention of childhood mental disorders generally, it is particularly important to prevent concurrent disorders given the added harms they cause. One effective approach entails expanding delivery of the many proven programs for preventing common conditions such as childhood anxiety, behaviour and substance use problems. Building on protective factors is another effective approach. For example, helping young people develop positive relationships with their parents has been found to protect against developing anxiety disorders.

For more information, see Vol. 17, No. 2 of the Children’s Mental Health Research Quarterly.

Pink Shirt Day promotes kindness and inclusivity

February 26 marks Pink Shirt Day, also known as antibullying day. Pink Shirt Day advocates kindness and inclusivity and raises awareness of bullying in schools, workplaces and homes. Across Canada, thousands of kids, families and colleagues show their support by wearing pink shirts — some from their closets and others purchased from official distributors like CKNW Kids’ Fund. Each year, proceeds from pink shirt sales go to organizations that support kids’ healthy self-esteem and teach empathy, compassion and kindness.

Pink Shirt Day was founded in 2007, when two Grade 12 students in a Nova Scotia high school took a stand against bullying in support of a younger classmate. The younger boy had been bullied for wearing a pink shirt on the first day of school. The Grade 12 students purchased and distributed pink shirts to their classmates, breaking the cycle of bullying.

Schools are excellent venues for reaching large numbers of children with antibullying programs. Programs can start early and can be offered across a range of ages, which means they reach more children to prevent the harms that come with bullying. To learn more about effective antibullying interventions, see Vol. 15, No. 4 of the Children’s Mental Health Research Quarterly.

Nurse-Family Partnership benefits children and mothers facing adversities, study shows

New findings from the Children’s Health Policy Centre’s scientific evaluation of the Nurse-Family Partnership (NFP) program show promising benefits for mothers regarding exposure to intimate partner violence, income, mental health and self-efficacy — warranting follow up of longer-term benefits across childhood.

The scientific team behind the BC Healthy Connections Project, or BCHCP, published these findings in the British Medical Journal Open. According to the study, NFP may help reduce adversities faced by mothers, including intimate partner violence, by the time their children are two years old.

For children, exposure to intimate partner violence is a serious form of maltreatment with long-term mental health consequences. Intimate partner violence is occurring at epidemic proportions, and rates are higher for lone mothers experiencing marginalization. Yet despite known harms to both children and mothers, efforts often focus on aftercare rather than prevention.

“These are important, encouraging findings on how to address early adversities,” said Nicole Catherine, BCHCP co-principal investigator, who holds the Canada Research Chair in Child Health Equity and Policy, Tier II. “We need greater investments in early prevention — well before children are born.”

BCHCP co-principal investigator Charlotte Waddell added that this landmark initiative has been a long-term priority for researchers in British Columbia (BC). It commenced in 2011 as the BC government prioritized early prevention of childhood adversities — leading to the BCHCP (2011-2022). “Our findings contribute further evidence that intervening in early childhood is a powerful policy mechanism to promote healthy child development,” said Waddell.

The Children’s Health Policy Centre (CHPC) at Simon Fraser University led the BCHCP randomized controlled trial, or RCT, in collaboration with McMaster University and other organizations.

A province-wide initiative, the BCHCP intended to address long-term child health inequities beginning before children were born. To do this, the trial was embedded within BC’s universal public health system. Four participating regional health authorities — Fraser, Interior, Island and Vancouver Coastal — were responsible for trial referrals, nursing and program costs. All five health authorities, including Northern Health, participated in a pilot nurse-guiding study and an adjunctive nurse-process evaluation. “BC showed tremendous leadership and foresight in investing in prevention of early childhood adversities,” said Catherine.

The study team was centrally located at the Children’s Health Policy Centre and supported scientific field interviewers across all four regional health authorities. Catherine provided scientific interviewers with intensive training and mentorship to ensure successful reach and sustained engagement with 739 pregnant girls and young women and their 737 children during each family’s 2.5-year participation.

The study included 200 Indigenous (including First Nations, Métis or Inuit) girls and young women. Making up 27% of the total participants, they generously agreed to participate in this long-term trial. Some 237 BCHCP children, or 32%, had an Indigenous mother or father.

“We are grateful to the participants for sharing their experiences with us while preparing to parent for the first time. Many shared how they wanted to make a difference for other children and mothers in similar circumstances,” said Catherine. Previous BCHCP reports have shown the strengths of the participants in seeking prenatal services while coping with cumulative adversities such as unstable housing and living on less than $10,000 per year.

The study was funded by the BC Ministries of Health, and Children and Family Development. The Mowafaghian and Stern Foundations provided additional generous supports.

Nurse-Family Partnership aims to improve the lives of children born to young, first-time mothers. The program focuses on families dealing with socioeconomic inequities. It begins in pregnancy and involves a program of home visits by public health nurses, continuing until children are two years old. NFP was developed in the United States by researcher David Olds and colleagues.

Earlier findings from the BCHCP research team had shown that NFP reduced prenatal substance exposure (nicotine and cannabis) and improved child mental health and language development by age two years. The BCHCP also involved an adjunctive biomarker sub-study.

“There is increasing interest and policy investments in delivering enhanced early prevention programs such as NFP in BC and Canada — all with expectations of sustained benefits. But we have yet to see if these benefits at age two years translate into sustained benefits across childhood and adolescence. This is where we will see the true value of intervening early,” Catherine said. “We are eager to re-engage the BCHCP children to see how they are doing and whether these investments made a difference in children’s lives, and to understand if they were cost-effective.”

Text of the BMJ Open paper is available here.

Media

For more information and contact details, please see the SFU News media release.

Effects of nurse-home visiting on intimate partner violence and maternal income, mental health and self-efficacy by 24 months postpartum: A randomised controlled trial

Catherine, N.L.A., MacMillan, H., Jack, S., Zheng, Y., Xie, H., Boyle, M., Sheehan, D., Gonzalez, A., Gafni, A., Tonmyr, L., Barr, R., Marcellus, L., Varcoe, C., & Waddell, C. (2025). Effects of nurse-home visiting on intimate partner violence and maternal income, mental health and self-efficacy by 24 months postpartum: a randomised controlled trial (British Columbia Healthy Connections Project). BMJ Open. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-083147

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CHPC scholars receive funding to support evaluation of “upstream” public health initiatives

A team of researchers led by Children’s Health Policy Centre scholars Kimberly Thomson and Nicole Catherine has received a 2024 Convening and Collaborating (C2) Award from Michael Smith Health Research BC. The award funding will help the research team improve the evaluation of upstream public health interventions in British Columbia.

Public health interventions are more effective when they address the bigger picture of people’s lives — the social conditions in which they are born, live, and age. These “upstream” interventions aim to tackle the root causes of health problems, addressing systemic inequities that traditional healthcare approaches may overlook. But the impacts of these interventions can be difficult to measure.

Thomson and Catherine will address this challenge by facilitating a series of conversations between policymakers, researchers and health practitioners. Through online consultations and an in-person Thought Exchange event, they will bring together researchers and research users to discuss the evaluation of upstream public health projects in BC.

The goal of these conversations is to help participants:

  • better understand current evaluation methods
  • identify opportunities for coordination between public health researchers and institutions
  • improve innovation and evaluation capacity
  • set future research priorities

“We’re really excited to have these rich discussions with our public health partners,” said Thomson. “It’s a great opportunity to shape our collaborative research priorities, including for upcoming child health policy initiatives in BC that we’ll be measuring and monitoring.”

The C2 Award supports researchers in British Columbia who are working collaboratively to address public health challenges. More information about the project and the award can be found on the Michael Smith Health Research BC website.

Home visiting programs lead to positive outcomes for children and mothers

A recent report by the Children’s Health Policy Centre found that home visiting programs can have significant benefits for mothers and children facing adversity.

The report looked at randomized controlled trial evaluations of 13 home visiting programs across Canada, the U.S. and other high-income jurisdictions to investigate the effectiveness of these programs. Seven intensive programs based on the Nurse Family Partnership (NFP) model demonstrated particularly robust benefits.

The benefits for children included:

  • reduced prenatal substance exposure
  • improved language
  • improved cognitive development
  • better mental health
  • better school readiness and reading
  • fewer injuries or maltreatment concerns

Benefits for mothers included:

  • better social supports
  • greater self-efficacy
  • fewer subsequent pregnancies
  • increased breastfeeding duration
  • better mental health
  • improved parenting
  • improved socioeconomic status
  • reduced exposure to intimate partner violence

NFP is an early intervention where nurses visit girls and women through pregnancy and their child’s early years. Nurses explore topics such as healthy pregnancy, parenting skills, healthy relationships and child development.

The report also identified six other home visiting programs that benefitted children and mothers. However, these programs had fewer positive outcomes than the NFP-based programs due to shorter durations, later interventions and the varied skill levels of providers.

These findings provide critical evidence that policymakers in British Columbia can use to build on the success of existing programs, develop new intervention strategies and ensure that children and mothers flourish.

To learn more, read the full report.