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Coronavirus: Early years review considers benefits of digital support for new parents

Digital and remote support can be 'vital’ for new parents struggling to get the help they need during the pandemic, MP Andrea Leadsom told Nursery World in an exclusive interview about the Government’s Early Years Healthy Development Review.
Andrea Leadsom MP is chair of the Early Years Healthy Development Review
Andrea Leadsom MP is chair of the Early Years Healthy Development Review

Although digital support should ‘never replace vital face-to-face support’, Ms Leadsom said that the Covid lockdown has shown that it can ‘significantly add to it’.

The Early Years Healthy Development Review, chaired by Ms Leadsom, is considering ways in which the power of technology can help give every baby the best start in life.

A digital version of the traditional Red Book, which records information on birth weight and immunisations, ‘
is on its way’ and ‘play dating’ apps, using similar technology to dating apps, are also being looked into.

Ms Leadsom told Nursery World, ‘We’re looking at much better shared data and recordkeeping, and the digital red book is potentially a key part of that.’

Five clear ways in which technology could really enhance and support the first 1001 critical days of a baby’s life were outlined in a joint article with Ms Leadsom and Miriam Cates, MP for Penistone & Stocksbridge, in Conservative Home last week (12 November)

  • ‘The digital Red Book: (remember the red plastic book, with pages that fall out, that we were all given at the birth of a child?) This is a valuable recorder of information on birth weight, immunisations etc, but how much better and simpler would it be if this was recorded in a private, digital space like an app where parents could also add other important markers in a child’s life such as first photos, a video of first steps and the first time they try solid food? This innovation is on its way thanks to excellent work already happening within the Department for Health.
  • ‘Medical Notes compiled by the midwife and health visitor are currently not "owned" by the parent. Instead, each service keeps their own notes, so that parents have to tell their story/reiterate their concerns over and over to multiple different health professionals. Technology offers an efficient solution for parents to own notes and data from their child’s first 1001 days, placing the power in their hands to share information with professionals in a GDPR compliant way when required.
  • ‘During lockdown, we have seen how vital interaction is for parents and their babies in the important perinatal period. We have heard heartbreaking stories of lonely first-time parents and small babies who have had little or no interaction with other children – and when meeting another baby for the first time are overwhelmed by what they are experiencing. The solution to this challenge could, extraordinarily, be to utilise the technology of dating apps. Imagine a "play dating" app that could match a new parent with another new Mum or Dad and a baby of a similar age, helping them to connect online or in person to improve the social and mutual support needed to combat isolation.
  • ‘The hugely trusted existing NHS website should have a section dedicated to everything early years, covering the period from conception to the age of two. This would enable families to get trusted advice from a reliable, consistent source, with an app available at their fingertips to boost the support that parents may need.
  • ‘The 111 helpline has now become a trusted public service, and it would be valuable to parents as well as time saving for early years professionals if there was an option to dial 111 and speak directly to an early years advisor. For a new parent seeking advice about the perinatal period or their baby’s health it would be reassuring to be quickly directed to a group that has the expertise to answer questions that would otherwise need to await an appointment with GP or health visitor.’

The article also referenced a number of popular and helpful baby apps, such as Best Beginnings’s ‘Baby Buddy,’ and Easy Peasy, which are providing advice on everything from how to cope with a crying baby and how to get better sleep, to help for mental health issues and parental conflict.

  • Read the full interview with Andrea Leadsom and public health minister Jo Churchill on the December issue of Nursery World, out next week