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Lucy Carroll
UNSW External Communications
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l.carroll@unsw.edu.au

UNSW Sydney has partnered with a network of public primary schools and preschools in south-western Sydney to establish one of the world's first school-based clinics to provide evidence-based early intervention to young children with severe disruptive behaviour.

Associate Professor Eva Kimonis, program director and clinical psychologist from the School of Psychology at UNSW Science, launched the outreach clinic yesterday at Ingleburn Public School.

More than 1000 students will be assessed during the first year of the clinic鈥檚 operation and the intervention called Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) will be offered free of charge to identified at-risk children and their parents and teachers. The clinic will be run from Ingleburn Public School but will operate across the greater Campbelltown area and include students from Macquarie Fields Public School, Sackville Street Public School, St Andrews Public School, Robert Townson Public School, Warwick Farm Public School, and Campbelltown Community Preschool.

The PCIT program is an evidence-based treatment for children between the ages of two to seven years who display disruptive behaviour problems. About 6% of Australian children have disruptive behaviour disorders, putting them at risk for future school failure and dropout, family violence, mental illness, and criminal behaviour.

Eva Kimonis

Associate Professor Eva Kimonis delivering Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) at the new Ingleburn Public School clinic. Photo: Adam Plucinski.

鈥淭his is a really important step in bridging the gap between clinical research and practice,鈥 said Associate Professor Kimonis. 鈥淲e have excellent evidence-based treatments that many families are never able to access.

鈥淭hese children tend to have early-starting conduct problems that negatively affect their home and school environments. There are a whole host of negative things that are likely to eventuate downstream for these children, their families, peers and teachers if we don鈥檛 address those problems early enough.

鈥淏y preschool age we can reliably identify when a child鈥檚 disruptive behaviours are at a level that require intervention.鈥

Students will be invited to participate in the PCIT program through either identification as at-risk through a school-wide screening, by teacher referral, or where they are struggling to transition from preschool to kindergarten.

Ingleburn Public School principal Graeme Green, who was at yesterday鈥檚 launch, said he hoped the clinic model would聽be so successful that it would聽spread into schools in the greater Sydney metro area.

鈥淣othing like this has been done before in a school setting. We are empowering our students to become collaborative, innovative global citizens, and this program will help them get there,鈥 said Mr Green.

Associate Professor Kimonis founded聽the Parent-Child Research Clinic at UNSW Psychology in 2013 and is its director. In 2016 published a ground-breaking study showing that indications of callous-unemotional traits which describe children low in empathy and remorse can be reliably observed in children as young as age three. She developed an enhanced PCIT treatment to target the unique needs of children with callous-unemotional traits because of their poor response to existing evidence-based treatments. She plans to deliver both standard and targeted versions of PCIT at the Ingleburn clinic.

Research has shown that PCIT reduces children's disruptive behaviours, improves parenting skills and overall family functioning, reduces parental stress levels, and has lower dropout rates than other parenting interventions.

Standard PCIT has two phases delivered via real-time coaching of parents using a wireless headset from behind a one-way mirror by a therapist. The intervention typically involves between 14 and 21 weekly one-hour sessions.

鈥淲e will also be implementing other interventions in partnering schools, including a general parenting program and online teacher training that we will be rolling out to help educators learn skills to manage disruptive behaviours.鈥

Eva Kimonis launching PCIT clinic

Associate Professor Eva Kimonis launching the clinic at Ingleburn Public School. Photo: Adam Plucinski.

The south-western Sydney area where the project will run has vulnerable communities with pockets of significant disadvantage with some families, groups and communities characterised by financial instability and unemployment; poorer mental and physical health; and lower use of preventative services compared to the rest of NSW.

鈥淎lthough there is some support for vulnerable families, some serious barriers can prevent them from accessing mental health services including lack of knowledge and understanding of the availability and cost of treatment, lack of child care, and long waiting lists. It is our goal to overcome many of these barriers by delivering PCIT directly in local schools,鈥 said Associate Professor Kimonis. 鈥淭his community is fortunate to have such forward-thinking leadership at the seven participating schools. Our hope is that this world-first, grassroots initiative will achieve national recognition and serve as a model for schools across Australia.鈥

Families interested in intervention services may contact the UNSW Parent-Child Research Clinic (phone聽(02) 9385 0376, email聽preschoolparenting@gmail.com, web聽).