跳至内容

  • 政策报告
  • 早期不平等:早期干预资金不足如何使低收入有色人种儿童落后

    本报告于 2019 年 12 月与 纽约儿童公民委员会 (CCC)报告显示,纽约州对纽约早期干预计划的投资不足,导致在服务获取方面存在严重的种族和社会经济差异。报告显示,如果生活在低收入的有色人种社区,三岁以下发育迟缓或残疾的儿童不太可能获得有助于他们充分发挥潜力的关键服务,并向纽约市和纽约州提出了一些建议,以增加早期干预服务的机会。

    2019 年 12 月 4 日

    Toddler playing with educational toys.

    Advocates for Children of New York published a new report in partnership with 纽约儿童公民委员会 (CCC) entitled 早期不平等:早期干预资金不足如何使低收入有色人种儿童落后, which shows that State disinvestment in New York’s Early Intervention program has caused major racial and socio-economic disparities in access to services.

    The analysis is based on data from the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene obtained through a Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) request. The data track children’s progress through the Early Intervention program—from referral, to evaluation, to eligibility determination, to service receipt—disaggregated by race and neighborhood from 2016-2018. As this report demonstrates, the data show that children under the age of three with developmental delays or disabilities are less likely to receive critical services that could help them reach their full potential if they live in low-income neighborhoods of color.

    In 2018, one out of every four children found eligible for Early Intervention services in New York State had to wait longer than the 30-day legal deadline for services, losing valuable opportunities to address developmental delays at a time when their brains are rapidly developing. Access to Early Intervention evaluations and services also varies widely across communities in New York City. In the Bronx, for instance, only 61% of children found eligible for services received them by the 30-day legal deadline—less than in any other borough. Overall, children in low-income communities of color are the least likely to receive the Early Intervention evaluations for which they are referred and the Early Intervention services for which they are found eligible. For example, the neighborhoods where children referred for Early Intervention evaluations due to concerns with their development were least likely to receive evaluations were Hunts Point-Mott Haven, Crotona-Tremont, Central Harlem-Morningside Heights, High Bridge-Morisania, and East Harlem.

    For years, the state has failed to adequately invest in Early Intervention, and young children in low-income communities of color are paying the price. This analysis confirms what we've seen on the ground: that the educational disparities we see later in life start before children even set foot in the classroom.”

    纽约儿童权益倡导组织执行董事 Kim Sweet

    In order to increase children’s access to Early Intervention services, the report recommends that New York State should:

    • Increase rates for Early Intervention evaluators, service providers and service coordinators by 10% to help address provider shortages.
    • Fund a cost-study to assess and recommend changes to the methodology used to determine payment for evaluations, service provision, and service coordination.
    • Adopt policies to ensure that commercial health insurance companies pay their fair share to help cover the cost of services.
    • Conduct a statewide analysis of disparities in access to evaluations and services and develop a plan to address such disparities.

    The report recommends that New York City should:

    • Enact Intro. 1406-2019, requiring the city to issue annual public reports on the provision of evaluations and services so the public can hold the city and state accountable.
    • Analyze the disparities and develop a plan to address them, including plans to recruit evaluators and providers for underserved neighborhoods, train service coordinators and providers in culturally responsive practices, and follow up with families whose children have not received evaluations or services.

    相关政策资源