Skip to main content

Early Relational Health (ERH) Determinants of Future Health and Wellbeing

In progress

The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine is seeking suggestions for experts to participate in the new study on early relational health. The study will examine evidence from family engagement and place-based community initiatives to identify effective strategies for strengthening early relational health, with attention to how social and economic conditions of daily life shape child and family well-being. It will assess practices and implementation strategies that support cross-sector early childhood systems change, including scale-up and sustainability, and identify federal and state policies, programs, and research priorities needed to advance and sustain early relational health.

Open until May 27, 2026, 11:59 PM EDT
Give feedback on the Provisional Committee Appointments
Formal comments on the provisional appointments are solicited. Your comments will be considered before committee membership is finalized.

Description

The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine will convene an ad hoc committee of experts to conduct a consensus study on early relational health (ERH). The committee will make recommendations on future directions for research, policy, and practices and recommend strategies and actions to translate basic and applied research findings to advance ERH across health care, childcare, education, and other community settings. In conducting its work, the committee will examine clinical, program, and research trends related to this paradigm shift that focus on ERH for infant, child, and family wellbeing.
The committee will address the following questions:
1. What evidence from family engagement and place-based community initiatives can guide effective strategies to strengthen early relational health? How can these initiatives incorporate the causal impacts of the conditions of daily life—including social and economic factors such as housing, food security, employment, education, and community environment—on child and family health and well-being?
2. What practices and implementation strategies best promote early relational health and community resilience through cross-sector early childhood systems change, including approaches that support effective scale-up and sustainability?
3. Which federal and state policies, programs, and research priorities are needed to advance and sustain early relational health?
The ad hoc committee will be appointed according to National Academies’ procedures to ensure balance, objectivity, and independence. To the extent possible, the committee of approximately 14 members, 2 of whom will be parent/caregiver and family leaders, will include experts with clinical, research, and lived experience. Key study members may possess the following expertise: parent and caregivers; dynamics of intra-family processes; child health care transformation; infant and early childhood mental health and care/education; early childhood system and community; relational health; Medicaid and Maternal Child Health policy; health care systems, including pediatric primary care and community health centers; health care economists/health care financing; cultural and evolutionary anthropology; sociologists of the interrelations between community/national contexts and family dynamics; population health, child development, and family/child survey researchers; strategic public health communication; education; neurodevelopment; and child development/early childhood care providers; early-life adversity, resilience, and health across the lifespan; and cultural variability in family relationships and child development.

Contributors

Committee

Co-Chair

Co-Chair

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Give feedback on committee Open until May 27, 2026

Comment on Provisional Committee Appointments

Viewers may communicate with the National Academies at any time over the project's duration. In addition, formal comments on the provisional appointments to a committee of the National Academies are solicited during the 20-calendar day period following the posting of the membership and, as described below, these comments will be considered before committee membership is finalized. We welcome your comments (Use the Feedback link below). Please note that the appointments made to this committee are provisional, and changes may be made. No appointment shall be considered final until we have evaluated relevant information bearing on the committee's composition and balance. This information will include the confidential written disclosures to The National Academies by each member-designate concerning potential sources of bias and conflict of interest pertaining to his or her service on the committee; information from discussion of the committee's composition and balance that is conducted in closed session at its first event and again whenever its membership changes; and any public comments that we have received on the membership during the 20-calendar day formal public comment period. If additional members are appointed to this committee, an additional 20-calendar day formal public comment period will be allowed. It is through this process that we determine whether the committee contains the requisite expertise to address its task and whether the points of views of individual members are adequately balanced such that the committee as a whole can address its charge objectively.

Sponsors

Department of Health and Human Services

Staff

Udara Perera

Lead

Madeleine Deye

Joshua Lang

Subscribe to Emails from the National Academies
Stay up to date on activities, publications, and events by subscribing to email updates.