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  • US National Academies get their man

    The cause of prevention science was given a boost in March 2009 by the publication of the US National Academies report Preventing Mental, Emotional and Behavioral Disorders Among Young People, and accompanying indications that it was likely to shape the policies of the incoming Obama administration. Its central recommendations about the value, social and economic, of long-term thinking were also echoed in UK policy discussions.

National Academies of Science

National Academies outline pathway to prevention

23 Mar 2009
The global economic crisis, a new US administration and compelling evidence about the cost of ignoring developmental disorders in young people - has prevention's moment arrived?

Boat carries prevention to the top

26 Mar 2009
“This has got to be near the top of the list, if not at the top of the list. We need action at the White House cabinet level…” National Academies committee vice chair Thomas Boat puts the argument for the prevention becoming a US national priority.

Pull down the silos - it's time to pool resources

25 Mar 2009
The National Academies report just published will help to set the agenda for US prevention science in the coming decade. What does the future hold for integrated, cross-disciplinary, cost-analyzed children's services?

Prevention for all? Same over here!

27 Mar 2009
“If we’re to see a change in our culture, we also need to engage the media in a public campaign to raise standards of care and education…" the UK response to the US National Academies’ report rallies behind calls for a public health perspective on prevention.

"It’s time we made the most of our perfect timing"

30 Mar 2009
“They looked after us like den mothers, though were not above turning into strict teachers when we needed a bit of discipline. Their vast experience of turning out this kind of report enabled them to reassure us, when we began to panic…” E Jane Costello looks back on her time among the Washington “bears”.