# Impact of a Mental Health Consultation Program on Child Psychosocial Development over Two School Years

**Authors:** Ruby Natale, Yue Pan, Yaray Agosto, Carolina Velasquez, Elana Mansoor, Rebecca Jane Bulotsky-Shearer, Sarah E. Messiah, Jason F. Jent

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/bs15111497 · 2025-11-04

## TL;DR

A mental health consultation program improved child psychosocial development over two school years compared to a control program.

## Contribution

This study provides new evidence on the long-term effectiveness of a mental health consultation model in early childhood education.

## Key findings

- JS+CS improved DECA Initiative and Self-Regulation compared to controls.
- Significant time-by-group interactions were observed for child psychosocial outcomes.
- The program supports scalable mental health consultation in ECE settings.

## Abstract

High-quality early care and education (ECE) programs, characterized by safe environments, emotionally supportive communication, proactive behavior supports, and teacher self-care practices, play a pivotal role in healthy child development. Early Childhood Mental Health Consultation (ECMHC) is an evidence-based approach designed to strengthen these environments and support young children’s social–emotional outcomes. However, the long-term impacts of ECMHC models remain understudied. Grounded in ECMHC, the purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of Jump Start Plus COVID Support (JS+CS) in supporting child psychosocial outcomes (prosocial behaviors and reduced externalizing/internalizing behaviors) over two school years. In a cluster-randomized trial, 12 ECE centers received the 14-week JS+CS intervention, and 12 attention control centers received a 14-week obesity prevention program. Children were followed over two school years to determine long-term impacts on behavior, measured by the Devereux Early Childhood Assessment (DECA) and the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ). Over two school years, significant time-by-group interactions emerged for primary child outcomes. The JS+CS group showed greater improvements in DECA Initiative and Self-Regulation (p = 0.01 and p = 0.02, respectively) compared to controls. JS+CS significantly enhanced child psychosocial functioning, supporting its potential as an effective model for a scalable mental health consultation in ECE settings.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** COVID (MESH:D000086382), externalizing (MESH:D017577), obesity (MESH:D009765)
- **Chemicals:** CS (MESH:D002586), JS (MESH:C000608249)

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12649173/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12649173