Dr. Kate Rosenblum’s Detroit News Op-Ed Urges Collective Action on Parental Stress and Support
Responding to the U.S. Surgeon General’s Advisory on Parenting Stress and Loneliness: A Q&A with Dr. Kate Rosenblum, Co-Director of Zero To Thrive
Responding to the U.S. Surgeon General’s Advisory on Parenting Stress and Loneliness: A Q&A with Dr. Kate Rosenblum, Co-Director of Zero To Thrive
Responding to the U.S. Surgeon General’s Advisory on Parenting Stress and Loneliness: A Q&A with Dr. Kate Rosenblum, Co-Director of Zero To Thrive
The field of infant and early childhood mental health, both nationally and internationally, was revolutionized by the pioneering work of Selma Fraiberg.
Dr. Jessica Riggs, Assistant Professor at Zero To Thrive in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Michigan, has been honored with the Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health (MI-AIMH) 2024 Hiram Fitzgerald Emerging Scholar/Researcher Award. Dr. Riggs is recognized for her innovative research advancing the field of Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health (IECMH), with a special focus on strengthening early relationships and supporting research and clinical practices that hold a social justice lens to address racial, ethnic, socioeconomic, and other inequities embedded in systems affecting young children and their families.
Decades of research show the tremendous social and economic advantages that investing in early childhood education provides! The article linked
Maria Muzik, MD, MSc and Cecilia Martinez-Torteya, PhD, from Zero To Thrive, were honored for their research as recipients of
Dr. Maria Muzik was interviewed for this Michigan Medicine Health Lab story about the new FDA approved pill to treat
xemeaino Project ‘Community Building through Relational Health: Perinatal Dialectical Behavior Therapy in Community Prevention/Intervention’ was one of the projects mentioned in
Dr. Kate Rosenblum and several Washtenaw community members were quoted in this Ann Arbor Observer story: Mom Power! A breakthrough program gets a boost